Today, we approach, and attempt to understand, one of the higher-level programming concepts - Abstraction.
= 0612 TV =
0612 TV, a sub-project of NERDfirst.net, is an educational YouTube channel. Started in 2008, we have now covered a wide range of topics, from areas such as Programming, Algorithms and Computing Theories, Computer Graphics, Photography, and Specialized Guides for using software such as FFMPEG, Deshaker, GIMP and more!
Enjoy your stay, and don't hesitate to drop me a comment or a personal message to my inbox =) If you like my work, don't forget to subscribe!
Like what you see? Buy me a coffee → http://www.nerdfirst.net/donate/
0612 TV Official Writeup: http://nerdfirst.net/0612tv
More about me: http://about.me/lcc0612
Official Twitter: http://twitter.com/0612tv
= NERDfirst =
NERDfirst is a project allowing me to go above and beyond YouTube videos into areas like app and game development. It will also contain the official 0612 TV blog and other resources.
Watch this space, and keep your eyes peeled on this channel for more updates! http://nerdfirst.net/
-----
Disclaimer: Please note that any information is provided on this channel in good faith, but I cannot guarantee 100% accuracy / correctness on all content. Contributors to this channel are not to be held responsible for any possible outcomes from your use of the information.

published:09 Apr 2014

views:26831

Here's a short crash course on abstract art, how it evolved and how to appreciate it.
(Note: Expressionism has not been included)
Drawn elements of the video were done using Skitch, where the JPG photos were then imported into iMovie.
This video is for educational purposes only.

published:30 Sep 2010

views:202478

For much of human history, people made art by trying to represent the world as it appeared around them. Until about 100 years ago, when a bunch of artists stopped trying to do that. It was shocking then and it still upsets and confounds today. How are we supposed to deal with art completely removed from recognizable objects? And why should we? This is the case for Abstraction.
Hear our case for Minimalism: https://youtu.be/XEi0Ib-nNGo
Subscribe for new episodes of The Art Assignment every Thursday!
--
Follow us elsewhere for the full Art Assignment experience:
Tumblr: http://theartassignment.com
Response Tumblr: http://all.theartassignment.com
Twitter: http://twitter.com/artassignment
Instagram: http://instagram.com/theartassignment/
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/theartassignment
and don't forget Reddit!: http://www.reddit.com/r/TheArtAssignment

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bg3oQ_OqQ_o&list=PLM4S2hGZDSE5SOht-nruKVOvuR5lrCw2T&index=1
First broadcast: Sep 2014.
Documentary in which painter and critic Matthew Collings charts the rise of abstract art over the last 100 years, whilst trying to answer a set of basic questions that many people have about this often-baffling art form. How do we respond to abstract art when we see it? Is it supposed to be hard or easy? When abstract artists chuck paint about with abandon, what does it mean? Does abstract art stand for something or is it supposed to be understood as just itself?
These might be thought of as unanswerable questions, but by looking at key historical figures and exploring the private world of abstract artists today, Collings shows that there are, in fact, answers.
Living artists in the programme create art in front of the camera using techniques that seem outrageously free, but through his friendly-yet-probing interview style Collings immediately establishes that the work always has a firm rationale. When Collings visits 92-year-old Bert Irvin in his studio in Stepney, east London he finds that the colourful works continue experiments in perceptual ideas about colour and space first established by abstract art pioneers such as Paul Klee and Wassily Kandinsky in the 1910s.
Other historic artists featured in the programme include the notorious Jackson Pollock, the maker of drip paintings, and Mark Rothko, whose abstractions often consist of nothing but large expanses of red. Collings explains the inner structure of such works. It turns out there are hidden rules to abstraction that viewers of this intriguing, groundbreaking programme may never have expected.

One of my teach-by-drawing examples done on Samsung Note 3, which I'll soon do more of, and incorporate into my talking-head coding videos in the future. Let me know in comments if you'd like to see more.

published:05 Mar 2014

views:6250

The complexity of the Impermanence that fosters ambiguity in our lives. Into Abstraction | Form and Impermanence.

published:25 May 2015

views:89

Into Abstraction | Form and Memories, the artist Walter Smith continues his exploration of field recordings translated into abstract constructs.

Inventive structural systems are the lynchpin of many great buildings. But there would be no need for advanced systems without imagination. Architects are creative and that’s why buildings don’t all look the same. The twentieth century has been especially innovative and it all began, in many ways, with the Modern Movement. The term refers to a new direction in arts and architecture in the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries.
An abstraction is the essence of something—a simplified representation. To abstract is to subjectively transform by stripping away the superfluous. Abstract painters like Picasso, Matisse, Klee, Kandinsky, and Boccioni took real subjects and ideas and simplified them to their basic elements. With modernism painters simplified their subject matter, and architects made building elements more primitive—that is, they left the bare-bones essentials. Modernists stripped ornament from their work and therefore the meaning associated with it.
By the beginning of the 20th century abstraction was to emerge with power in Germany with examples like Peter Behren’s AEG Turbine factory, Walter Gropius and Adolf Meyers Shoe factory and the Glass Pavilion by Bruno Taut. And in FranceSwiss French architect Le Corbusier’s was perfecting the Modern style. His Villa Savoye, completed in 1931, is a notable example of abstraction. His columns became simple, undecorated, functional elements that held up the building—they were called pilotis. Stairs were replaced with ramps, and individual windows became strips of glass called ribbon windows. Adolf Loos distilled his buildings down to un ornamented geometric shapes. Walter Gropius founded the Bauhaus, a school for modernism in Germany. His work, including the building in Dessau finished in 1926, was stripped down and bare—stucco, concrete, and massive areas of glass.

Abstraction - A Programming Concept

Today, we approach, and attempt to understand, one of the higher-level programming concepts - Abstraction.
= 0612 TV =
0612 TV, a sub-project of NERDfirst.net, is an educational YouTube channel. Started in 2008, we have now covered a wide range of topics, from areas such as Programming, Algorithms and Computing Theories, Computer Graphics, Photography, and Specialized Guides for using software such as FFMPEG, Deshaker, GIMP and more!
Enjoy your stay, and don't hesitate to drop me a comment or a personal message to my inbox =) If you like my work, don't forget to subscribe!
Like what you see? Buy me a coffee → http://www.nerdfirst.net/donate/
0612 TV Official Writeup: http://nerdfirst.net/0612tv
More about me: http://about.me/lcc0612
Official Twitter: http://twitter.com/0612tv
= NERDfirst =
NERDfirst is a project allowing me to go above and beyond YouTube videos into areas like app and game development. It will also contain the official 0612 TV blog and other resources.
Watch this space, and keep your eyes peeled on this channel for more updates! http://nerdfirst.net/
-----
Disclaimer: Please note that any information is provided on this channel in good faith, but I cannot guarantee 100% accuracy / correctness on all content. Contributors to this channel are not to be held responsible for any possible outcomes from your use of the information.

7:20

What is Abstract Art?

What is Abstract Art?

What is Abstract Art?

Here's a short crash course on abstract art, how it evolved and how to appreciate it.
(Note: Expressionism has not been included)
Drawn elements of the video were done using Skitch, where the JPG photos were then imported into iMovie.
This video is for educational purposes only.

9:18

The Case for Abstraction | The Art Assignment | PBS Digital Studios

The Case for Abstraction | The Art Assignment | PBS Digital Studios

The Case for Abstraction | The Art Assignment | PBS Digital Studios

For much of human history, people made art by trying to represent the world as it appeared around them. Until about 100 years ago, when a bunch of artists stopped trying to do that. It was shocking then and it still upsets and confounds today. How are we supposed to deal with art completely removed from recognizable objects? And why should we? This is the case for Abstraction.
Hear our case for Minimalism: https://youtu.be/XEi0Ib-nNGo
Subscribe for new episodes of The Art Assignment every Thursday!
--
Follow us elsewhere for the full Art Assignment experience:
Tumblr: http://theartassignment.com
Response Tumblr: http://all.theartassignment.com
Twitter: http://twitter.com/artassignment
Instagram: http://instagram.com/theartassignment/
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/theartassignment
and don't forget Reddit!: http://www.reddit.com/r/TheArtAssignment

1/6 The Rules Of Abstraction With Matthew Collings

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bg3oQ_OqQ_o&list=PLM4S2hGZDSE5SOht-nruKVOvuR5lrCw2T&index=1
First broadcast: Sep 2014.
Documentary in which painter and critic Matthew Collings charts the rise of abstract art over the last 100 years, whilst trying to answer a set of basic questions that many people have about this often-baffling art form. How do we respond to abstract art when we see it? Is it supposed to be hard or easy? When abstract artists chuck paint about with abandon, what does it mean? Does abstract art stand for something or is it supposed to be understood as just itself?
These might be thought of as unanswerable questions, but by looking at key historical figures and exploring the private world of abstract artists today, Collings shows that there are, in fact, answers.
Living artists in the programme create art in front of the camera using techniques that seem outrageously free, but through his friendly-yet-probing interview style Collings immediately establishes that the work always has a firm rationale. When Collings visits 92-year-old Bert Irvin in his studio in Stepney, east London he finds that the colourful works continue experiments in perceptual ideas about colour and space first established by abstract art pioneers such as Paul Klee and Wassily Kandinsky in the 1910s.
Other historic artists featured in the programme include the notorious Jackson Pollock, the maker of drip paintings, and Mark Rothko, whose abstractions often consist of nothing but large expanses of red. Collings explains the inner structure of such works. It turns out there are hidden rules to abstraction that viewers of this intriguing, groundbreaking programme may never have expected.

Abstraction Layers Explained

One of my teach-by-drawing examples done on Samsung Note 3, which I'll soon do more of, and incorporate into my talking-head coding videos in the future. Let me know in comments if you'd like to see more.

7:40

Into Abstraction | Form and Impermanence

Into Abstraction | Form and Impermanence

Into Abstraction | Form and Impermanence

The complexity of the Impermanence that fosters ambiguity in our lives. Into Abstraction | Form and Impermanence.

4:33

Into Abstraction | Form and Memories

Into Abstraction | Form and Memories

Into Abstraction | Form and Memories

Into Abstraction | Form and Memories, the artist Walter Smith continues his exploration of field recordings translated into abstract constructs.

Into Abstraction | Form and Place

Trabeation | Why Buildings Look Like They Do, pt.8 - Abstraction

Inventive structural systems are the lynchpin of many great buildings. But there would be no need for advanced systems without imagination. Architects are creative and that’s why buildings don’t all look the same. The twentieth century has been especially innovative and it all began, in many ways, with the Modern Movement. The term refers to a new direction in arts and architecture in the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries.
An abstraction is the essence of something—a simplified representation. To abstract is to subjectively transform by stripping away the superfluous. Abstract painters like Picasso, Matisse, Klee, Kandinsky, and Boccioni took real subjects and ideas and simplified them to their basic elements. With modernism painters simplified their subject matter, and architects made building elements more primitive—that is, they left the bare-bones essentials. Modernists stripped ornament from their work and therefore the meaning associated with it.
By the beginning of the 20th century abstraction was to emerge with power in Germany with examples like Peter Behren’s AEG Turbine factory, Walter Gropius and Adolf Meyers Shoe factory and the Glass Pavilion by Bruno Taut. And in FranceSwiss French architect Le Corbusier’s was perfecting the Modern style. His Villa Savoye, completed in 1931, is a notable example of abstraction. His columns became simple, undecorated, functional elements that held up the building—they were called pilotis. Stairs were replaced with ramps, and individual windows became strips of glass called ribbon windows. Adolf Loos distilled his buildings down to un ornamented geometric shapes. Walter Gropius founded the Bauhaus, a school for modernism in Germany. His work, including the building in Dessau finished in 1926, was stripped down and bare—stucco, concrete, and massive areas of glass.

Teaching the Abstraction Counting Principle

Please subscribe and share! New videos added weekly.
For more information on the Counting Principles, check out our series of books for EarlyLearners. origoeducation.com/mym
Do you have any lightbulb moments to share with us? Comment below.
This ORIGO ONE series of videos show you how to create lightbulb moments for your students. These videos take a mathematics concept and break it into pieces that are easy to understand and only take a minute to watch.
www.origoeducation.com
Check out our other social media:
www.facebook.com/origoeducation
www.twitter.com/origomath
www.pinterest.com/origoeducation

3:56

Into Abstraction | Nuances - Extended Video Remix

Into Abstraction | Nuances - Extended Video Remix

Into Abstraction | Nuances - Extended Video Remix

Nuances, the extended video remix is a further working towards the abstract in form and complexity. Each element of the video is explored through various micro-tonal add-on effects. Through this process, I am gaining insight into the various visual options I have via the software and how to implement them to create a visual cohesive construct. The variations seem infinite indeed. Again I am using both my own film and stock film together. Musically I am continuing the theme of sound samples, field recordings and piano phases. As I explored the makings of sound for my films, I will be utilizing various sound effects and recording techniques in the process. Slowly things will evolve, as the learning curve for both the visual and aural elements are investigated, manipulated and constructed.

1:43

Abstraction of Movement

Abstraction of Movement

Abstraction of Movement

This video is a demonstration of how everyday gestures can be abstracted into dance movement

3:14

Vito Campanelli - Trip into abstraction

Vito Campanelli - Trip into abstraction

Vito Campanelli - Trip into abstraction

5:50

8 Painting Styles of Abstraction

8 Painting Styles of Abstraction

8 Painting Styles of Abstraction

Script:
8 different Painting Styles of Abstraction
Pointillism is a technique of painting in which small, dots of pure color are applied in patterns to form an image. Georges Seurat developed the technique in 1886. The technique relies on the ability of the eye and mind of the viewer to blend the color spots into a fuller range of tones. The practice of Pointillism contrasts with the traditional methods of blending pigments on a palette. Pointillism is similar to the process used by printers, televisions and computer monitors to represent image in color.
Vincent van Gogh's style was characterized by bold, dramatic brush strokes, which expressed emotion and added a feeling of movement to his works. Rather than using realistic colours, he often used paint straight from the tube and deliberately used colors to capture his moods.
Fauvism is the style of les Fauves. Les Fauves is French for 'the wild beasts'. Fauvist style began around 1900 and continued beyond 1910. The leaders of the movement were Henri Matisse and André Derain. The paintings of the Fauves were characterized by wild brush work and bright colours. Their subject matter was abstracted and simplified. Fauvism can be classified as a development of Van Gogh's style fused with Pointillism.
Expressionism originated in Germany at the beginning of the 20th century. Paintings in the expressionist style present the world from the artist's personal perspective through distorting figures and strong colours used for emotional effect in order to evoke moods. Expressionist artists sought to express meaning or experience sometimes suggestive of emotional angst.
Cubism was pioneered by Picasso and Braque. The first Cubist exhibition happened in 1911 in Paris. In Cubist artwork, objects are broken up and reassembled in an abstracted form. Cubist paintings have flattened volume and subdued colours. Subjects of the painting are depicted from multiple viewpoints and confused perspectives which can make it difficult to distinguish objects from each other and from the space they inhabit.
Futurism originated in Italy in the early 20th century and was founded by Filippo Tommaso Marinetti. It emphasized and glorified themes associated with concepts of the future, including speed, technology, youth and violence, and objects such as the car, the airplane and the industrial city. The Futurist painters developed a style by breaking color down into a field of stippled dots and stripes.
Around 1913, David Bomberg was interested in Cubism. He wanted to create a new visual language to express his perceptions of the modern industrial city. He want to translate the life of a great city, its motion, its machinery, into an art based on simplified figure drawings. Bomberg superimposed a grid to break up the composition into geometric sections and used flat colours to obscure the original subject. His paintings have dynamic angular features.
Suprematism was an art movement, focused on basic geometric forms, such as circles, squares, lines, and rectangles, painted in a limited range of colors. It was founded by Kazimir Malevich in Russia, in 1915. Suprematism is an art based upon pure artistic feeling expressed through geometric abstraction rather than on realistic visual depiction of objects.
Subscribe to School of Yule:
http://www.youtube.com/user/SchoolofYule?sub_confirmation=1

4:50

These Abstract Paintings Are Unbelievably Satisfying

These Abstract Paintings Are Unbelievably Satisfying

These Abstract Paintings Are Unbelievably Satisfying

Toronto-based artist Callen Schaub invites us into his studio to see how he uses swinging troughs, paint can pendulums, and bicycle parts to create his signature abstract paintings.
»Subscribe to CBC Arts to watch more videos: http://bit.ly/CBCArtsSubscribe
Callen Schaub's practice draws from a rich history of artists using spinning and dripping techniques — from Damien Hirst to Jackson Pollock. But Callen has invented his own homemade devices that include swinging troughs, paint can pendulums and bicycle parts that help him create his signature works. In this video, Callen takes you inside his paint-splattered studio for a look at how he makes his dazzling works of art.
Follow Callen Schaub on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/callenschaub/?hl=en
Find us at http://bit.ly/CBCArtsWeb
CBC Arts on Facebook: http://bit.ly/CBCArtsFacebook
CBC Arts on Twitter: http://bit.ly/CBCArtsTwitter
CBC Arts on Instagram: http://bit.ly/CBCArtsInstagram
About: CBC Arts is your destination for extraordinary Canadian arts. Whether you're a culture vulture, a working artist, an avid crafter, a compulsive doodler or just a dabbler in the arts, there's something for you here.
These abstract paintings are unbelievably satisfying
https://www.youtube.com/CBCArts

13:30

Women Artists and Postwar Abstraction | HOW TO SEE the art movement with Corey D'Augustine

Women Artists and Postwar Abstraction | HOW TO SEE the art movement with Corey D'Augustine

Women Artists and Postwar Abstraction | HOW TO SEE the art movement with Corey D'Augustine

Female artists of the postwar era have been largely underrepresented in modern art history. Conservator and IN THE STUDIO instructor Corey D'Augustine explores works of artists like Helen Frankenthaler, Louise Nevelson, and Yayoi Kusama, among others, and argues that their styles were so diverse and individualistic that just about the only thing they had in common was their gender.
Subscribe for our latest videos, and invitations to live events: http://mo.ma/subscribe
Explore our collection online: http://mo.ma/art
Plan your visit in-person: http://mo.ma/visit
Watch more HOW TO SEE videos from MoMA
http://bit.ly/2sQlUMZ
See more of Corey D'Augustine in MoMA's IN THE STUDIO series:
http://bit.ly/2sPS1Nq
“Making Space: Women Artists and Postwar Abstraction“ is now on view at the Museum of Modern Art. Learn more: mo.ma/makingspace
Learn about the techniques of New York School painters like Yayoi Kusama, Willem de Kooning, and Agnes Martin in MoMA's free online course, "In the Studio: Postwar AbstractPainting." Sign up: http://mo.ma/inthestudio
Featuring Corey D'Augustine, Educator and Independent Conservator.
The comments and opinions expressed in this video are those of the speaker alone, and do not represent the views of The Museum of Modern Art, its personnel, or any artist.
#art #moma #museum #modernart #nyc #education #artist #photography #painting #womenartists #femaleartists #abstract #abstractart #kusama #nevelson

Abstraction - A Programming Concept

Today, we approach, and attempt to understand, one of the higher-level programming concepts - Abstraction.
= 0612 TV =
0612 TV, a sub-project of NERDfirst.net, is an educational YouTube channel. Started in 2008, we have now covered a wide range of topics, from areas such as Programming, Algorithms and Computing Theories, Computer Graphics, Photography, and Specialized Guides for using software such as FFMPEG, Deshaker, GIMP and more!
Enjoy your stay, and don't hesitate to drop me a comment or a personal message to my inbox =) If you like my work, don't forget to subscribe!
Like what you see? Buy me a coffee → http://www.nerdfirst.net/donate/
0612 TV Official Writeup: http://nerdfirst.net/0612tv
More about me: http://about.me/lcc0612
Official Twitter: http://twitter.com/0612tv
= NERDfi...

published: 09 Apr 2014

What is Abstract Art?

Here's a short crash course on abstract art, how it evolved and how to appreciate it.
(Note: Expressionism has not been included)
Drawn elements of the video were done using Skitch, where the JPG photos were then imported into iMovie.
This video is for educational purposes only.

published: 30 Sep 2010

The Case for Abstraction | The Art Assignment | PBS Digital Studios

For much of human history, people made art by trying to represent the world as it appeared around them. Until about 100 years ago, when a bunch of artists stopped trying to do that. It was shocking then and it still upsets and confounds today. How are we supposed to deal with art completely removed from recognizable objects? And why should we? This is the case for Abstraction.
Hear our case for Minimalism: https://youtu.be/XEi0Ib-nNGo
Subscribe for new episodes of The Art Assignment every Thursday!
--
Follow us elsewhere for the full Art Assignment experience:
Tumblr: http://theartassignment.com
Response Tumblr: http://all.theartassignment.com
Twitter: http://twitter.com/artassignment
Instagram: http://instagram.com/theartassignment/
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/theartassignment
an...

Into Abstraction at the Hyde Gallery

1/6 The Rules Of Abstraction With Matthew Collings

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bg3oQ_OqQ_o&list=PLM4S2hGZDSE5SOht-nruKVOvuR5lrCw2T&index=1
First broadcast: Sep 2014.
Documentary in which painter and critic Matthew Collings charts the rise of abstract art over the last 100 years, whilst trying to answer a set of basic questions that many people have about this often-baffling art form. How do we respond to abstract art when we see it? Is it supposed to be hard or easy? When abstract artists chuck paint about with abandon, what does it mean? Does abstract art stand for something or is it supposed to be understood as just itself?
These might be thought of as unanswerable questions, but by looking at key historical figures and exploring the private world of abstract artists today, Collings shows that there are, in fact, answers.
Living ar...

Abstraction Layers Explained

One of my teach-by-drawing examples done on Samsung Note 3, which I'll soon do more of, and incorporate into my talking-head coding videos in the future. Let me know in comments if you'd like to see more.

published: 05 Mar 2014

Into Abstraction | Form and Impermanence

The complexity of the Impermanence that fosters ambiguity in our lives. Into Abstraction | Form and Impermanence.

published: 25 May 2015

Into Abstraction | Form and Memories

Into Abstraction | Form and Memories, the artist Walter Smith continues his exploration of field recordings translated into abstract constructs.

published: 15 Feb 2015

Into Abstraction | Form and Place

Trabeation | Why Buildings Look Like They Do, pt.8 - Abstraction

Inventive structural systems are the lynchpin of many great buildings. But there would be no need for advanced systems without imagination. Architects are creative and that’s why buildings don’t all look the same. The twentieth century has been especially innovative and it all began, in many ways, with the Modern Movement. The term refers to a new direction in arts and architecture in the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries.
An abstraction is the essence of something—a simplified representation. To abstract is to subjectively transform by stripping away the superfluous. Abstract painters like Picasso, Matisse, Klee, Kandinsky, and Boccioni took real subjects and ideas and simplified them to their basic elements. With modernism painters simplified their subject matter, and archi...

Teaching the Abstraction Counting Principle

Please subscribe and share! New videos added weekly.
For more information on the Counting Principles, check out our series of books for EarlyLearners. origoeducation.com/mym
Do you have any lightbulb moments to share with us? Comment below.
This ORIGO ONE series of videos show you how to create lightbulb moments for your students. These videos take a mathematics concept and break it into pieces that are easy to understand and only take a minute to watch.
www.origoeducation.com
Check out our other social media:
www.facebook.com/origoeducation
www.twitter.com/origomath
www.pinterest.com/origoeducation

published: 24 May 2016

Into Abstraction | Nuances - Extended Video Remix

Nuances, the extended video remix is a further working towards the abstract in form and complexity. Each element of the video is explored through various micro-tonal add-on effects. Through this process, I am gaining insight into the various visual options I have via the software and how to implement them to create a visual cohesive construct. The variations seem infinite indeed. Again I am using both my own film and stock film together. Musically I am continuing the theme of sound samples, field recordings and piano phases. As I explored the makings of sound for my films, I will be utilizing various sound effects and recording techniques in the process. Slowly things will evolve, as the learning curve for both the visual and aural elements are investigated, manipulated and constructed.

published: 14 Jan 2015

Abstraction of Movement

This video is a demonstration of how everyday gestures can be abstracted into dance movement

published: 02 Mar 2013

Vito Campanelli - Trip into abstraction

published: 05 May 2012

8 Painting Styles of Abstraction

Script:
8 different Painting Styles of Abstraction
Pointillism is a technique of painting in which small, dots of pure color are applied in patterns to form an image. Georges Seurat developed the technique in 1886. The technique relies on the ability of the eye and mind of the viewer to blend the color spots into a fuller range of tones. The practice of Pointillism contrasts with the traditional methods of blending pigments on a palette. Pointillism is similar to the process used by printers, televisions and computer monitors to represent image in color.
Vincent van Gogh's style was characterized by bold, dramatic brush strokes, which expressed emotion and added a feeling of movement to his works. Rather than using realistic colours, he often used paint straight from the tube and deli...

published: 22 Mar 2013

These Abstract Paintings Are Unbelievably Satisfying

Toronto-based artist Callen Schaub invites us into his studio to see how he uses swinging troughs, paint can pendulums, and bicycle parts to create his signature abstract paintings.
»Subscribe to CBC Arts to watch more videos: http://bit.ly/CBCArtsSubscribe
Callen Schaub's practice draws from a rich history of artists using spinning and dripping techniques — from Damien Hirst to Jackson Pollock. But Callen has invented his own homemade devices that include swinging troughs, paint can pendulums and bicycle parts that help him create his signature works. In this video, Callen takes you inside his paint-splattered studio for a look at how he makes his dazzling works of art.
Follow Callen Schaub on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/callenschaub/?hl=en
Find us at http://bit.ly/CBCArtsWe...

published: 15 Jun 2017

Women Artists and Postwar Abstraction | HOW TO SEE the art movement with Corey D'Augustine

Female artists of the postwar era have been largely underrepresented in modern art history. Conservator and IN THE STUDIO instructor Corey D'Augustine explores works of artists like Helen Frankenthaler, Louise Nevelson, and Yayoi Kusama, among others, and argues that their styles were so diverse and individualistic that just about the only thing they had in common was their gender.
Subscribe for our latest videos, and invitations to live events: http://mo.ma/subscribe
Explore our collection online: http://mo.ma/art
Plan your visit in-person: http://mo.ma/visit
Watch more HOW TO SEE videos from MoMA
http://bit.ly/2sQlUMZ
See more of Corey D'Augustine in MoMA's IN THE STUDIO series:
http://bit.ly/2sPS1Nq
“Making Space: Women Artists and Postwar Abstraction“ is now on view at the Museum...

Abstraction - A Programming Concept

Today, we approach, and attempt to understand, one of the higher-level programming concepts - Abstraction.
= 0612 TV =
0612 TV, a sub-project of NERDfirst.net,...

Today, we approach, and attempt to understand, one of the higher-level programming concepts - Abstraction.
= 0612 TV =
0612 TV, a sub-project of NERDfirst.net, is an educational YouTube channel. Started in 2008, we have now covered a wide range of topics, from areas such as Programming, Algorithms and Computing Theories, Computer Graphics, Photography, and Specialized Guides for using software such as FFMPEG, Deshaker, GIMP and more!
Enjoy your stay, and don't hesitate to drop me a comment or a personal message to my inbox =) If you like my work, don't forget to subscribe!
Like what you see? Buy me a coffee → http://www.nerdfirst.net/donate/
0612 TV Official Writeup: http://nerdfirst.net/0612tv
More about me: http://about.me/lcc0612
Official Twitter: http://twitter.com/0612tv
= NERDfirst =
NERDfirst is a project allowing me to go above and beyond YouTube videos into areas like app and game development. It will also contain the official 0612 TV blog and other resources.
Watch this space, and keep your eyes peeled on this channel for more updates! http://nerdfirst.net/
-----
Disclaimer: Please note that any information is provided on this channel in good faith, but I cannot guarantee 100% accuracy / correctness on all content. Contributors to this channel are not to be held responsible for any possible outcomes from your use of the information.

Today, we approach, and attempt to understand, one of the higher-level programming concepts - Abstraction.
= 0612 TV =
0612 TV, a sub-project of NERDfirst.net, is an educational YouTube channel. Started in 2008, we have now covered a wide range of topics, from areas such as Programming, Algorithms and Computing Theories, Computer Graphics, Photography, and Specialized Guides for using software such as FFMPEG, Deshaker, GIMP and more!
Enjoy your stay, and don't hesitate to drop me a comment or a personal message to my inbox =) If you like my work, don't forget to subscribe!
Like what you see? Buy me a coffee → http://www.nerdfirst.net/donate/
0612 TV Official Writeup: http://nerdfirst.net/0612tv
More about me: http://about.me/lcc0612
Official Twitter: http://twitter.com/0612tv
= NERDfirst =
NERDfirst is a project allowing me to go above and beyond YouTube videos into areas like app and game development. It will also contain the official 0612 TV blog and other resources.
Watch this space, and keep your eyes peeled on this channel for more updates! http://nerdfirst.net/
-----
Disclaimer: Please note that any information is provided on this channel in good faith, but I cannot guarantee 100% accuracy / correctness on all content. Contributors to this channel are not to be held responsible for any possible outcomes from your use of the information.

What is Abstract Art?

Here's a short crash course on abstract art, how it evolved and how to appreciate it.
(Note: Expressionism has not been included)
Drawn elements of the video w...

Here's a short crash course on abstract art, how it evolved and how to appreciate it.
(Note: Expressionism has not been included)
Drawn elements of the video were done using Skitch, where the JPG photos were then imported into iMovie.
This video is for educational purposes only.

Here's a short crash course on abstract art, how it evolved and how to appreciate it.
(Note: Expressionism has not been included)
Drawn elements of the video were done using Skitch, where the JPG photos were then imported into iMovie.
This video is for educational purposes only.

The Case for Abstraction | The Art Assignment | PBS Digital Studios

For much of human history, people made art by trying to represent the world as it appeared around them. Until about 100 years ago, when a bunch of artists stopp...

For much of human history, people made art by trying to represent the world as it appeared around them. Until about 100 years ago, when a bunch of artists stopped trying to do that. It was shocking then and it still upsets and confounds today. How are we supposed to deal with art completely removed from recognizable objects? And why should we? This is the case for Abstraction.
Hear our case for Minimalism: https://youtu.be/XEi0Ib-nNGo
Subscribe for new episodes of The Art Assignment every Thursday!
--
Follow us elsewhere for the full Art Assignment experience:
Tumblr: http://theartassignment.com
Response Tumblr: http://all.theartassignment.com
Twitter: http://twitter.com/artassignment
Instagram: http://instagram.com/theartassignment/
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/theartassignment
and don't forget Reddit!: http://www.reddit.com/r/TheArtAssignment

For much of human history, people made art by trying to represent the world as it appeared around them. Until about 100 years ago, when a bunch of artists stopped trying to do that. It was shocking then and it still upsets and confounds today. How are we supposed to deal with art completely removed from recognizable objects? And why should we? This is the case for Abstraction.
Hear our case for Minimalism: https://youtu.be/XEi0Ib-nNGo
Subscribe for new episodes of The Art Assignment every Thursday!
--
Follow us elsewhere for the full Art Assignment experience:
Tumblr: http://theartassignment.com
Response Tumblr: http://all.theartassignment.com
Twitter: http://twitter.com/artassignment
Instagram: http://instagram.com/theartassignment/
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/theartassignment
and don't forget Reddit!: http://www.reddit.com/r/TheArtAssignment

1/6 The Rules Of Abstraction With Matthew Collings

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bg3oQ_OqQ_o&list=PLM4S2hGZDSE5SOht-nruKVOvuR5lrCw2T&index=1
First broadcast: Sep 2014.
Documentary in which painter and critic M...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bg3oQ_OqQ_o&list=PLM4S2hGZDSE5SOht-nruKVOvuR5lrCw2T&index=1
First broadcast: Sep 2014.
Documentary in which painter and critic Matthew Collings charts the rise of abstract art over the last 100 years, whilst trying to answer a set of basic questions that many people have about this often-baffling art form. How do we respond to abstract art when we see it? Is it supposed to be hard or easy? When abstract artists chuck paint about with abandon, what does it mean? Does abstract art stand for something or is it supposed to be understood as just itself?
These might be thought of as unanswerable questions, but by looking at key historical figures and exploring the private world of abstract artists today, Collings shows that there are, in fact, answers.
Living artists in the programme create art in front of the camera using techniques that seem outrageously free, but through his friendly-yet-probing interview style Collings immediately establishes that the work always has a firm rationale. When Collings visits 92-year-old Bert Irvin in his studio in Stepney, east London he finds that the colourful works continue experiments in perceptual ideas about colour and space first established by abstract art pioneers such as Paul Klee and Wassily Kandinsky in the 1910s.
Other historic artists featured in the programme include the notorious Jackson Pollock, the maker of drip paintings, and Mark Rothko, whose abstractions often consist of nothing but large expanses of red. Collings explains the inner structure of such works. It turns out there are hidden rules to abstraction that viewers of this intriguing, groundbreaking programme may never have expected.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bg3oQ_OqQ_o&list=PLM4S2hGZDSE5SOht-nruKVOvuR5lrCw2T&index=1
First broadcast: Sep 2014.
Documentary in which painter and critic Matthew Collings charts the rise of abstract art over the last 100 years, whilst trying to answer a set of basic questions that many people have about this often-baffling art form. How do we respond to abstract art when we see it? Is it supposed to be hard or easy? When abstract artists chuck paint about with abandon, what does it mean? Does abstract art stand for something or is it supposed to be understood as just itself?
These might be thought of as unanswerable questions, but by looking at key historical figures and exploring the private world of abstract artists today, Collings shows that there are, in fact, answers.
Living artists in the programme create art in front of the camera using techniques that seem outrageously free, but through his friendly-yet-probing interview style Collings immediately establishes that the work always has a firm rationale. When Collings visits 92-year-old Bert Irvin in his studio in Stepney, east London he finds that the colourful works continue experiments in perceptual ideas about colour and space first established by abstract art pioneers such as Paul Klee and Wassily Kandinsky in the 1910s.
Other historic artists featured in the programme include the notorious Jackson Pollock, the maker of drip paintings, and Mark Rothko, whose abstractions often consist of nothing but large expanses of red. Collings explains the inner structure of such works. It turns out there are hidden rules to abstraction that viewers of this intriguing, groundbreaking programme may never have expected.

Abstraction Layers Explained

One of my teach-by-drawing examples done on Samsung Note 3, which I'll soon do more of, and incorporate into my talking-head coding videos in the future. Let me...

One of my teach-by-drawing examples done on Samsung Note 3, which I'll soon do more of, and incorporate into my talking-head coding videos in the future. Let me know in comments if you'd like to see more.

One of my teach-by-drawing examples done on Samsung Note 3, which I'll soon do more of, and incorporate into my talking-head coding videos in the future. Let me know in comments if you'd like to see more.

Trabeation | Why Buildings Look Like They Do, pt.8 - Abstraction

Inventive structural systems are the lynchpin of many great buildings. But there would be no need for advanced systems without imagination. Architects are creat...

Inventive structural systems are the lynchpin of many great buildings. But there would be no need for advanced systems without imagination. Architects are creative and that’s why buildings don’t all look the same. The twentieth century has been especially innovative and it all began, in many ways, with the Modern Movement. The term refers to a new direction in arts and architecture in the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries.
An abstraction is the essence of something—a simplified representation. To abstract is to subjectively transform by stripping away the superfluous. Abstract painters like Picasso, Matisse, Klee, Kandinsky, and Boccioni took real subjects and ideas and simplified them to their basic elements. With modernism painters simplified their subject matter, and architects made building elements more primitive—that is, they left the bare-bones essentials. Modernists stripped ornament from their work and therefore the meaning associated with it.
By the beginning of the 20th century abstraction was to emerge with power in Germany with examples like Peter Behren’s AEG Turbine factory, Walter Gropius and Adolf Meyers Shoe factory and the Glass Pavilion by Bruno Taut. And in FranceSwiss French architect Le Corbusier’s was perfecting the Modern style. His Villa Savoye, completed in 1931, is a notable example of abstraction. His columns became simple, undecorated, functional elements that held up the building—they were called pilotis. Stairs were replaced with ramps, and individual windows became strips of glass called ribbon windows. Adolf Loos distilled his buildings down to un ornamented geometric shapes. Walter Gropius founded the Bauhaus, a school for modernism in Germany. His work, including the building in Dessau finished in 1926, was stripped down and bare—stucco, concrete, and massive areas of glass.

Inventive structural systems are the lynchpin of many great buildings. But there would be no need for advanced systems without imagination. Architects are creative and that’s why buildings don’t all look the same. The twentieth century has been especially innovative and it all began, in many ways, with the Modern Movement. The term refers to a new direction in arts and architecture in the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries.
An abstraction is the essence of something—a simplified representation. To abstract is to subjectively transform by stripping away the superfluous. Abstract painters like Picasso, Matisse, Klee, Kandinsky, and Boccioni took real subjects and ideas and simplified them to their basic elements. With modernism painters simplified their subject matter, and architects made building elements more primitive—that is, they left the bare-bones essentials. Modernists stripped ornament from their work and therefore the meaning associated with it.
By the beginning of the 20th century abstraction was to emerge with power in Germany with examples like Peter Behren’s AEG Turbine factory, Walter Gropius and Adolf Meyers Shoe factory and the Glass Pavilion by Bruno Taut. And in FranceSwiss French architect Le Corbusier’s was perfecting the Modern style. His Villa Savoye, completed in 1931, is a notable example of abstraction. His columns became simple, undecorated, functional elements that held up the building—they were called pilotis. Stairs were replaced with ramps, and individual windows became strips of glass called ribbon windows. Adolf Loos distilled his buildings down to un ornamented geometric shapes. Walter Gropius founded the Bauhaus, a school for modernism in Germany. His work, including the building in Dessau finished in 1926, was stripped down and bare—stucco, concrete, and massive areas of glass.

Teaching the Abstraction Counting Principle

Please subscribe and share! New videos added weekly.
For more information on the Counting Principles, check out our series of books for EarlyLearners. origoed...

Please subscribe and share! New videos added weekly.
For more information on the Counting Principles, check out our series of books for EarlyLearners. origoeducation.com/mym
Do you have any lightbulb moments to share with us? Comment below.
This ORIGO ONE series of videos show you how to create lightbulb moments for your students. These videos take a mathematics concept and break it into pieces that are easy to understand and only take a minute to watch.
www.origoeducation.com
Check out our other social media:
www.facebook.com/origoeducation
www.twitter.com/origomath
www.pinterest.com/origoeducation

Please subscribe and share! New videos added weekly.
For more information on the Counting Principles, check out our series of books for EarlyLearners. origoeducation.com/mym
Do you have any lightbulb moments to share with us? Comment below.
This ORIGO ONE series of videos show you how to create lightbulb moments for your students. These videos take a mathematics concept and break it into pieces that are easy to understand and only take a minute to watch.
www.origoeducation.com
Check out our other social media:
www.facebook.com/origoeducation
www.twitter.com/origomath
www.pinterest.com/origoeducation

Into Abstraction | Nuances - Extended Video Remix

Nuances, the extended video remix is a further working towards the abstract in form and complexity. Each element of the video is explored through various micro-...

Nuances, the extended video remix is a further working towards the abstract in form and complexity. Each element of the video is explored through various micro-tonal add-on effects. Through this process, I am gaining insight into the various visual options I have via the software and how to implement them to create a visual cohesive construct. The variations seem infinite indeed. Again I am using both my own film and stock film together. Musically I am continuing the theme of sound samples, field recordings and piano phases. As I explored the makings of sound for my films, I will be utilizing various sound effects and recording techniques in the process. Slowly things will evolve, as the learning curve for both the visual and aural elements are investigated, manipulated and constructed.

Nuances, the extended video remix is a further working towards the abstract in form and complexity. Each element of the video is explored through various micro-tonal add-on effects. Through this process, I am gaining insight into the various visual options I have via the software and how to implement them to create a visual cohesive construct. The variations seem infinite indeed. Again I am using both my own film and stock film together. Musically I am continuing the theme of sound samples, field recordings and piano phases. As I explored the makings of sound for my films, I will be utilizing various sound effects and recording techniques in the process. Slowly things will evolve, as the learning curve for both the visual and aural elements are investigated, manipulated and constructed.

8 Painting Styles of Abstraction

Script:
8 different Painting Styles of Abstraction
Pointillism is a technique of painting in which small, dots of pure color are applied in patterns to form...

Script:
8 different Painting Styles of Abstraction
Pointillism is a technique of painting in which small, dots of pure color are applied in patterns to form an image. Georges Seurat developed the technique in 1886. The technique relies on the ability of the eye and mind of the viewer to blend the color spots into a fuller range of tones. The practice of Pointillism contrasts with the traditional methods of blending pigments on a palette. Pointillism is similar to the process used by printers, televisions and computer monitors to represent image in color.
Vincent van Gogh's style was characterized by bold, dramatic brush strokes, which expressed emotion and added a feeling of movement to his works. Rather than using realistic colours, he often used paint straight from the tube and deliberately used colors to capture his moods.
Fauvism is the style of les Fauves. Les Fauves is French for 'the wild beasts'. Fauvist style began around 1900 and continued beyond 1910. The leaders of the movement were Henri Matisse and André Derain. The paintings of the Fauves were characterized by wild brush work and bright colours. Their subject matter was abstracted and simplified. Fauvism can be classified as a development of Van Gogh's style fused with Pointillism.
Expressionism originated in Germany at the beginning of the 20th century. Paintings in the expressionist style present the world from the artist's personal perspective through distorting figures and strong colours used for emotional effect in order to evoke moods. Expressionist artists sought to express meaning or experience sometimes suggestive of emotional angst.
Cubism was pioneered by Picasso and Braque. The first Cubist exhibition happened in 1911 in Paris. In Cubist artwork, objects are broken up and reassembled in an abstracted form. Cubist paintings have flattened volume and subdued colours. Subjects of the painting are depicted from multiple viewpoints and confused perspectives which can make it difficult to distinguish objects from each other and from the space they inhabit.
Futurism originated in Italy in the early 20th century and was founded by Filippo Tommaso Marinetti. It emphasized and glorified themes associated with concepts of the future, including speed, technology, youth and violence, and objects such as the car, the airplane and the industrial city. The Futurist painters developed a style by breaking color down into a field of stippled dots and stripes.
Around 1913, David Bomberg was interested in Cubism. He wanted to create a new visual language to express his perceptions of the modern industrial city. He want to translate the life of a great city, its motion, its machinery, into an art based on simplified figure drawings. Bomberg superimposed a grid to break up the composition into geometric sections and used flat colours to obscure the original subject. His paintings have dynamic angular features.
Suprematism was an art movement, focused on basic geometric forms, such as circles, squares, lines, and rectangles, painted in a limited range of colors. It was founded by Kazimir Malevich in Russia, in 1915. Suprematism is an art based upon pure artistic feeling expressed through geometric abstraction rather than on realistic visual depiction of objects.
Subscribe to School of Yule:
http://www.youtube.com/user/SchoolofYule?sub_confirmation=1

Script:
8 different Painting Styles of Abstraction
Pointillism is a technique of painting in which small, dots of pure color are applied in patterns to form an image. Georges Seurat developed the technique in 1886. The technique relies on the ability of the eye and mind of the viewer to blend the color spots into a fuller range of tones. The practice of Pointillism contrasts with the traditional methods of blending pigments on a palette. Pointillism is similar to the process used by printers, televisions and computer monitors to represent image in color.
Vincent van Gogh's style was characterized by bold, dramatic brush strokes, which expressed emotion and added a feeling of movement to his works. Rather than using realistic colours, he often used paint straight from the tube and deliberately used colors to capture his moods.
Fauvism is the style of les Fauves. Les Fauves is French for 'the wild beasts'. Fauvist style began around 1900 and continued beyond 1910. The leaders of the movement were Henri Matisse and André Derain. The paintings of the Fauves were characterized by wild brush work and bright colours. Their subject matter was abstracted and simplified. Fauvism can be classified as a development of Van Gogh's style fused with Pointillism.
Expressionism originated in Germany at the beginning of the 20th century. Paintings in the expressionist style present the world from the artist's personal perspective through distorting figures and strong colours used for emotional effect in order to evoke moods. Expressionist artists sought to express meaning or experience sometimes suggestive of emotional angst.
Cubism was pioneered by Picasso and Braque. The first Cubist exhibition happened in 1911 in Paris. In Cubist artwork, objects are broken up and reassembled in an abstracted form. Cubist paintings have flattened volume and subdued colours. Subjects of the painting are depicted from multiple viewpoints and confused perspectives which can make it difficult to distinguish objects from each other and from the space they inhabit.
Futurism originated in Italy in the early 20th century and was founded by Filippo Tommaso Marinetti. It emphasized and glorified themes associated with concepts of the future, including speed, technology, youth and violence, and objects such as the car, the airplane and the industrial city. The Futurist painters developed a style by breaking color down into a field of stippled dots and stripes.
Around 1913, David Bomberg was interested in Cubism. He wanted to create a new visual language to express his perceptions of the modern industrial city. He want to translate the life of a great city, its motion, its machinery, into an art based on simplified figure drawings. Bomberg superimposed a grid to break up the composition into geometric sections and used flat colours to obscure the original subject. His paintings have dynamic angular features.
Suprematism was an art movement, focused on basic geometric forms, such as circles, squares, lines, and rectangles, painted in a limited range of colors. It was founded by Kazimir Malevich in Russia, in 1915. Suprematism is an art based upon pure artistic feeling expressed through geometric abstraction rather than on realistic visual depiction of objects.
Subscribe to School of Yule:
http://www.youtube.com/user/SchoolofYule?sub_confirmation=1

These Abstract Paintings Are Unbelievably Satisfying

Toronto-based artist Callen Schaub invites us into his studio to see how he uses swinging troughs, paint can pendulums, and bicycle parts to create his signatur...

Toronto-based artist Callen Schaub invites us into his studio to see how he uses swinging troughs, paint can pendulums, and bicycle parts to create his signature abstract paintings.
»Subscribe to CBC Arts to watch more videos: http://bit.ly/CBCArtsSubscribe
Callen Schaub's practice draws from a rich history of artists using spinning and dripping techniques — from Damien Hirst to Jackson Pollock. But Callen has invented his own homemade devices that include swinging troughs, paint can pendulums and bicycle parts that help him create his signature works. In this video, Callen takes you inside his paint-splattered studio for a look at how he makes his dazzling works of art.
Follow Callen Schaub on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/callenschaub/?hl=en
Find us at http://bit.ly/CBCArtsWeb
CBC Arts on Facebook: http://bit.ly/CBCArtsFacebook
CBC Arts on Twitter: http://bit.ly/CBCArtsTwitter
CBC Arts on Instagram: http://bit.ly/CBCArtsInstagram
About: CBC Arts is your destination for extraordinary Canadian arts. Whether you're a culture vulture, a working artist, an avid crafter, a compulsive doodler or just a dabbler in the arts, there's something for you here.
These abstract paintings are unbelievably satisfying
https://www.youtube.com/CBCArts

Toronto-based artist Callen Schaub invites us into his studio to see how he uses swinging troughs, paint can pendulums, and bicycle parts to create his signature abstract paintings.
»Subscribe to CBC Arts to watch more videos: http://bit.ly/CBCArtsSubscribe
Callen Schaub's practice draws from a rich history of artists using spinning and dripping techniques — from Damien Hirst to Jackson Pollock. But Callen has invented his own homemade devices that include swinging troughs, paint can pendulums and bicycle parts that help him create his signature works. In this video, Callen takes you inside his paint-splattered studio for a look at how he makes his dazzling works of art.
Follow Callen Schaub on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/callenschaub/?hl=en
Find us at http://bit.ly/CBCArtsWeb
CBC Arts on Facebook: http://bit.ly/CBCArtsFacebook
CBC Arts on Twitter: http://bit.ly/CBCArtsTwitter
CBC Arts on Instagram: http://bit.ly/CBCArtsInstagram
About: CBC Arts is your destination for extraordinary Canadian arts. Whether you're a culture vulture, a working artist, an avid crafter, a compulsive doodler or just a dabbler in the arts, there's something for you here.
These abstract paintings are unbelievably satisfying
https://www.youtube.com/CBCArts

Female artists of the postwar era have been largely underrepresented in modern art history. Conservator and IN THE STUDIO instructor Corey D'Augustine explores works of artists like Helen Frankenthaler, Louise Nevelson, and Yayoi Kusama, among others, and argues that their styles were so diverse and individualistic that just about the only thing they had in common was their gender.
Subscribe for our latest videos, and invitations to live events: http://mo.ma/subscribe
Explore our collection online: http://mo.ma/art
Plan your visit in-person: http://mo.ma/visit
Watch more HOW TO SEE videos from MoMA
http://bit.ly/2sQlUMZ
See more of Corey D'Augustine in MoMA's IN THE STUDIO series:
http://bit.ly/2sPS1Nq
“Making Space: Women Artists and Postwar Abstraction“ is now on view at the Museum of Modern Art. Learn more: mo.ma/makingspace
Learn about the techniques of New York School painters like Yayoi Kusama, Willem de Kooning, and Agnes Martin in MoMA's free online course, "In the Studio: Postwar AbstractPainting." Sign up: http://mo.ma/inthestudio
Featuring Corey D'Augustine, Educator and Independent Conservator.
The comments and opinions expressed in this video are those of the speaker alone, and do not represent the views of The Museum of Modern Art, its personnel, or any artist.
#art #moma #museum #modernart #nyc #education #artist #photography #painting #womenartists #femaleartists #abstract #abstractart #kusama #nevelson

Female artists of the postwar era have been largely underrepresented in modern art history. Conservator and IN THE STUDIO instructor Corey D'Augustine explores works of artists like Helen Frankenthaler, Louise Nevelson, and Yayoi Kusama, among others, and argues that their styles were so diverse and individualistic that just about the only thing they had in common was their gender.
Subscribe for our latest videos, and invitations to live events: http://mo.ma/subscribe
Explore our collection online: http://mo.ma/art
Plan your visit in-person: http://mo.ma/visit
Watch more HOW TO SEE videos from MoMA
http://bit.ly/2sQlUMZ
See more of Corey D'Augustine in MoMA's IN THE STUDIO series:
http://bit.ly/2sPS1Nq
“Making Space: Women Artists and Postwar Abstraction“ is now on view at the Museum of Modern Art. Learn more: mo.ma/makingspace
Learn about the techniques of New York School painters like Yayoi Kusama, Willem de Kooning, and Agnes Martin in MoMA's free online course, "In the Studio: Postwar AbstractPainting." Sign up: http://mo.ma/inthestudio
Featuring Corey D'Augustine, Educator and Independent Conservator.
The comments and opinions expressed in this video are those of the speaker alone, and do not represent the views of The Museum of Modern Art, its personnel, or any artist.
#art #moma #museum #modernart #nyc #education #artist #photography #painting #womenartists #femaleartists #abstract #abstractart #kusama #nevelson

Money on the Left: Aesthetics & Abstraction

*Money on the Left: Word, Image, Praxis*
Aesthetics & Abstraction
Rachel Cox, “Not So-OK KO: Neoliberal Anxieties in Current Televised Animation”
Modern monetary theory, in addition to providing a different approach to understanding economics, explicitly critiques the more traditional, neoliberal worldview. Both views come with different aesthetic implications, as explored in modern monetary aesthetic theory. In general, because neoliberalism has an anxious relationship of denial towards abstraction, aesthetic abstraction is largely suppressed. However, this relationship is further complicated in the medium of children’s animation, wherein abstraction is built into the constructed, animated worlds. In this talk, I will look at one of the ways that abstraction is simultaneously embraced...

In this lecture, “Demystifying Abstraction,” artist Jessica Singerman shares a brief history of abstraction, and talks about her painting process, inspiration, life as an artist, and why making art matters. The talk is followed by a Q&A session where she goes into more detail about her education, philosophy, and where art comes from. The lecture, given on Wednesday April 25, is part of the Charlotte Millennial ArtProgram series at ElderGallery in Charlotte, NC.
www.jessicasingerman.com

published: 08 May 2018

The Importance of Abstraction in Management

This is video # 2 in EISM course on the DefinitiveTheory of Management.
"When I tell people that there is a definitive way to understand management, I think most people - especially those with management experience - are a little skeptical and I certainly understand why. If you bear with me, however, you’ll see that this is exactly what we have. We have a definitive theory of management, which we’re defining as the science of fuller being. I say science because that’s exactly what it is. And I say fuller being because that’s exactly what everybody’s after – we want to avoid extinction and live forever as a species. So let’s take this one step at a time.
In the first video, we started at a higher level of abstraction than most people are used to when it comes to thinking about manageme...

published: 04 May 2018

Abstraction Artist: Anne Marchand Documentary

Abstract painting can thrust us into the unknown, immersing us in the midst of liminal visual and emotional experiences, without fixed name or context. This kind of art is full of risk and unexpected reward, asking the viewer to take a fraught journey right along with the artist.
Anne Marchand’s paintings transport us into virtual worlds that form themselves before our eyes.She presents visions of a reality that is alive with shifting space, moving color, and animated lines. These phenomena are embodied in the material reality of paint, along with a range of materials embedded in the work’s surface.
In Marchand’s work over the past ten years, the emotional range, poetic import, and inner structures have evolved significantly. What remains consistent is this artist’s pursuit of a quality ...

published: 17 Apr 2018

Birth of a Painting Series XII: World in Abstraction

This series, World of Abstraction, my paintings are based upon philosophical ideas and addressing the unknown. Paintings by Denise Hartley.
Copyright 2018.
http://www.dahartley.com
“Passage Way”, mixed media on wood, gold leaf, 4’ x 6’, 2002. Private collection.
“Passage Way”, the opening to another dimension.
“Mitochondria I, Mitochondria II, mixed media on wood, gold leaf, 4’ x 6’, 2002. Private collections.
Each of our cells can contain thousands of mitochondria. They are used by our bodies to convert molecules into energy.
“JadeDisc”, acrylic paint on canvas, 4’ x 6’, 2002.
“Jade Disc”, called a bi disc, is a flat jade disc, with a circular hole in the center. They were used in Neolithic times, burial objects, undecorated, about 3000 B.C.E. The jade objects represent Heaven a...

published: 05 Mar 2018

Enter into Abstraction with Acrylic Ink Droplets

I'm new at this, so feel free to laugh! I'm a photographer, working my way into the digital age, and thought I'd share some tips and tricks I've learned about specialized/trick/abstract photography along the way (and I'm still learning).
This episode is about using acrylic in in a fishtank of water to get visually interesting abstracts. You can see full albums of this work at my facebook page:
https://www.facebook.com/richparkerimage
I'm working on a promo website, et cetera, but it's not ready for prime time yet.
So watch, comment, enjoy, and hopefully you'll find something useful from the video.

We present an interactive method that allows users to easily abstract complex 3D models with only a few strokes. The key idea is to employ well-known Gestalt principles to help generalizing user inputs into a full model abstraction while accounting for form, perceptual patterns, and semantics of the model. Using these principles, we alleviate the user’s need to explicitly define shape abstractions. We utilize structural characteristics such as repetitions, regularity and similarity to transform user strokes into full 3D abstractions. As the user sketches over shape elements, we identify Gestalt groups and later abstract them to maintain their structural meaning. Unlike previous approaches, we operate directly on the geometric elements, in a sense applying Gestalt principles in 3D. We demon...

published: 23 Feb 2018

Agent of Change: Thought Into Form "Living in Abstraction"

Living an abstract life is a lifestyle, something that is embraced every day and in the every day, which allows me to live in a place where time, space, metaphor, personal symbols and icons, and messages from a higher place dictate and expand my ideas and decisions. There are some aspects to embracing and maintaining this state of being, of living. Today, I’m going to share the aspects which mean the most to me.
For more info, visit www.thoughtintoform.org

https://www.fiverr.com/dannying
intro videos maker - In this video I'm going to show you how to make an intro video for your website using your TEXTIntroMakerFreeOnline | How to make a free intro for your youtube videos Category how to make an intro without downloads, In Explore, you can discover and watch new music, news, sports, and trailers from ShowTodayTV best creators, brands, and Channels
A far more stylish and professional way of going about it is to make an intro that gently leads into the main content of the video
How to make an intro 2018 Mp3 song file download now in 320 kbps Video how to make an intro beginner, All video with tags how to make an intro beginner | Website offers the hottest video clips, troll clips of girls, kids, animals
top 5 free windows live movie m...

Abstraction UHC Season 1 Episode 4 ~ Potsie, Dianab and I are in Frenzy apparently

Hello and welcome to Abstraction Season 1!
Abstraction is an RR organized by Mrsonicfan and MaverickMC where each season we try pairing cool gamemode combinations together while maintaining a rather different roster.
For our first season, we will be doing random teams of four, with two gamemodes. The first being compensation, where When a player on a team dies, the player's max health is divided up and added to the max health of the player's teammates, along with gapples healing 20% of your maximum amount of health. The second gamemode being Quad Soul-Brothers, where at the beginning of Episode 1, each player on a team is scattered into a separate world, only to be rescattered together in Episode 5.
Teams:
Blue:
----------
5kylord: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCz0WSqA-RjzXxILgd6bpK...

published: 29 Dec 2017

Abstraction UHC: S1E4 - Austro Dies In This Episode

Hello and welcome to Abstraction Season 1!
Abstraction is an RR organized by Mrsonicfan and MaverickMC where each season we try pairing cool gamemode combinations together while maintaining a rather different roster.
For our first season, we will be doing random teams of four, with two gamemodes. The first being compensation, where When a player on a team dies, the player's max health is divided up and added to the max health of the player's teammates, along with gapples healing 20% of your maximum amount of health. The second gamemode being Quad Soul-Brothers, where at the beginning of Episode 1, each player on a team is scattered into a separate world, only to be rescattered together in Episode 5.
Teams:
Blue:
----------
5kylord: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCz0WSqA-RjzXxILgd6b...

published: 29 Dec 2017

Abstraction UHC : Ep2 - Map to Diamonds

Hello and welcome to Abstraction Season 1!
Abstraction is an RR organized by Mrsonicfan and MaverickMC where each season we try pairing cool gamemode combinations together while maintaining a rather different roster.
For our first season, we will be doing random teams of four, with two gamemodes. The first being compensation, where When a player on a team dies, the player's max health is divided up and added to the max health of the player's teammates, along with gapples healing 20% of your maximum amount of health. The second gamemode being Quad Soul-Brothers, where at the beginning of Episode 1, each player on a team is scattered into a separate world, only to be rescattered together in Episode 5.
Teams:
Blue:
----------
5kylord: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCz0WSqA-RjzXxILgd6b...

River Ehen, Cumbria Abstraction 36ML/d

Freedom of InformationRequest on Sellafield's Fresh Water Abstraction from the River Ehen.
Dear Ms Birkby,
Apologies for the delay in responding to your request for information.
I have made enquiries on your behalf and the answers to your questions are
below in red*
1. Will the NDA cease abstraction from the river Ehen in order to
protect endangered fresh water pearl mussels?
(Abstraction license no 2774005004. 32.4 MEGA Litres per day for
Sellafield evaporative cooling and process water.)
*The NDA operates in full compliance with this licence and there are
currently no plans to cease abstraction.*
2. Does the NDA use borehole water to compensate (put into the Ehen) for
the 32.4 MEGA Litres abstracted daily from the Ehen?
*No.*
3. If so where does the borehole water com...

Watch trailer of the interesting movie about A lady was had amnesia due to some events that happened to her in the past, this lead her into a journey and struggle to find her identity

published: 20 Oct 2017

abstraction: How to pronounce abstraction with Phonetic and Examples

This video shows how to pronounce abstraction correctly with phonetic and examples on how to use it
abstraction Definition : a general concept formed by extracting common features from specific examples
abstraction Phonetic : æb'strækʃn
abstraction Synonyms : concept, idea, notion, thought, generality, generalization, theory, theorem, formula, hypothesis, speculation, conjecture, supposition, presumption
abstraction Examples :
Through abstraction I aspire towards the infinite rather than the specific, she observes.
It is the perspective of abstract ideality that, just because of its abstraction, is morally justified.
He can flit from populist argument to high brow abstraction and then back into quango-speak and then consultancy jargon with amazing felicity.
1,00,000 words with definiti...

Annabeth Rosen on Abstraction

Abstraction:
In constant exploration of the temporal nature of ceramics, Rosen melds the performative into both material and process. Composing through laborious, additive techniques, she pushes the medium beyond spectacle and into conversations about endurance-based performance, feminist thought, contemporary painting, and conceptual art. The artist rarely attempts to obscure her hand as a primary instrument and often “binds” multitudes of discrete works to create multifarious objects, sometimes diminutive and occasionally monumental. Rosen is at her best when offering the viewer the unexpected precariousness of objects bound together in delicate harmony or unbridled disorder.
______________________________
Annabeth Rosen: Fired, Broken, Gathered, Heaped is the artist’s first major surve...

*Money on the Left: Word, Image, Praxis*
Aesthetics & Abstraction
Rachel Cox, “Not So-OK KO: Neoliberal Anxieties in Current Televised Animation”
Modern monetary theory, in addition to providing a different approach to understanding economics, explicitly critiques the more traditional, neoliberal worldview. Both views come with different aesthetic implications, as explored in modern monetary aesthetic theory. In general, because neoliberalism has an anxious relationship of denial towards abstraction, aesthetic abstraction is largely suppressed. However, this relationship is further complicated in the medium of children’s animation, wherein abstraction is built into the constructed, animated worlds. In this talk, I will look at one of the ways that abstraction is simultaneously embraced (in the bodies of the characters) and aggressively suppressed (in the worlds that the cartoons take place) in contemporary televised children’s cartoons.
Michael McDowell, “The Neoliberal, Austerity Money-Physics in the Dystopian SurvivalGame, The Flame in the Flood”
The Flame in the Flood (2017) was released by independent game developer The Molasses Flood. The game sets the player in control of a protagonist on the river of a post- apocalyptic landscape. The player navigates through this landscape but can never actually beat the game: no matter how good the player is, the protagonist always ends up dead. The game, in its visual and musical constructions of place and setting, makes explicit the inherent tensions in Modernity. The game is a digitally-distributed entertainment media that invokes pre-modern folk sensibilities in music and gameplay, the artistic style of the game’s lead artist Scott Sinclair is at once realistic and detailed while also grotesque and gothic, and the game was funded and distributed through crowd sourcing and independent game and music networks while relying on traditionally capitalist ways of selling the game to players. What’s most notable for this conference is the game’s embrace of neoliberal money- physics to create such a dystopian playground: every action in the game, from levels of thirst to the amount of sickness a player is enduring, is quantified and itemized in a way that adheres to a liberal money economic system. The player’s character, we’re told, must die because the developers simply don’t have the mechanics to provide another outcome. If a player, constrained by the rules of the game constructed rather arbitrarily by the designers, can play in such a dystopian sandbox with austerity, constrained game mechanics, what does that say about the possibilities of play in a system that understands boundless, public ideas of money? If money plays by the will of the market due to natural law, why does a game that creates the ideal liberal austerity landscape look like such an awful place to inhabit?
Maxximilian Seijo, “Inglorious Basterds: NaziDesire Fully Employed”
Quentin Tarantino’s 2009 film Inglorious Basterds sketches an alternate history for the end of WWII and the defeat of the Nazis. In retelling this history, the film avows specific aesthetic and narrative structures that allude to a desire for the figure of the Nazi. Where other forms of media typically deny this persistent desire, Inglorious Basterds embraces it in a Baroque sensationalism. In this paper, I will argue that this desire emanates from a particular economic moment in American life in which money’s boundlessness was utilized: the WWII mobilization. The mobilization enabled the lowest unemployment rate in the history of the United States, and marked the triumph of the “greatest generation” of Americans serving in the factories or on the front lines. This triumph is predicated on the Nazi enemy. WithoutNazism, the mass-unemployment of the depression would have lingered into the future. Hinting at this connection, the film makes specific overtures to the nature of employment “obligations” in relationship to fighting Nazism. Looking closely at the film, I reveal how it expresses an unconscious dependence upon the Nazi villain. What is more, I shall contend that the film makes evident this desire for the Nazi through its braiding of cinema writ large with the existence of Nazism. Without the Nazi villain, we lose the cinema. In our desire for employment, we create Nazis on screen that stimulate our desire for the Nazi enemy. Paradoxically, the Nazi form is a form we create to grasp for employment in a quest for social care. As an evocative depiction of this multi-generational quest, Inglorious Basterds discloses and implicates spectators in this repressed desire and permits us to reorganize our political and aesthetic economies around social provisioning rather than war.
@moneyontheleft
https://www.facebook.com/moneyontheleft/
http://modern-money-humanities.webflow.io/

*Money on the Left: Word, Image, Praxis*
Aesthetics & Abstraction
Rachel Cox, “Not So-OK KO: Neoliberal Anxieties in Current Televised Animation”
Modern monetary theory, in addition to providing a different approach to understanding economics, explicitly critiques the more traditional, neoliberal worldview. Both views come with different aesthetic implications, as explored in modern monetary aesthetic theory. In general, because neoliberalism has an anxious relationship of denial towards abstraction, aesthetic abstraction is largely suppressed. However, this relationship is further complicated in the medium of children’s animation, wherein abstraction is built into the constructed, animated worlds. In this talk, I will look at one of the ways that abstraction is simultaneously embraced (in the bodies of the characters) and aggressively suppressed (in the worlds that the cartoons take place) in contemporary televised children’s cartoons.
Michael McDowell, “The Neoliberal, Austerity Money-Physics in the Dystopian SurvivalGame, The Flame in the Flood”
The Flame in the Flood (2017) was released by independent game developer The Molasses Flood. The game sets the player in control of a protagonist on the river of a post- apocalyptic landscape. The player navigates through this landscape but can never actually beat the game: no matter how good the player is, the protagonist always ends up dead. The game, in its visual and musical constructions of place and setting, makes explicit the inherent tensions in Modernity. The game is a digitally-distributed entertainment media that invokes pre-modern folk sensibilities in music and gameplay, the artistic style of the game’s lead artist Scott Sinclair is at once realistic and detailed while also grotesque and gothic, and the game was funded and distributed through crowd sourcing and independent game and music networks while relying on traditionally capitalist ways of selling the game to players. What’s most notable for this conference is the game’s embrace of neoliberal money- physics to create such a dystopian playground: every action in the game, from levels of thirst to the amount of sickness a player is enduring, is quantified and itemized in a way that adheres to a liberal money economic system. The player’s character, we’re told, must die because the developers simply don’t have the mechanics to provide another outcome. If a player, constrained by the rules of the game constructed rather arbitrarily by the designers, can play in such a dystopian sandbox with austerity, constrained game mechanics, what does that say about the possibilities of play in a system that understands boundless, public ideas of money? If money plays by the will of the market due to natural law, why does a game that creates the ideal liberal austerity landscape look like such an awful place to inhabit?
Maxximilian Seijo, “Inglorious Basterds: NaziDesire Fully Employed”
Quentin Tarantino’s 2009 film Inglorious Basterds sketches an alternate history for the end of WWII and the defeat of the Nazis. In retelling this history, the film avows specific aesthetic and narrative structures that allude to a desire for the figure of the Nazi. Where other forms of media typically deny this persistent desire, Inglorious Basterds embraces it in a Baroque sensationalism. In this paper, I will argue that this desire emanates from a particular economic moment in American life in which money’s boundlessness was utilized: the WWII mobilization. The mobilization enabled the lowest unemployment rate in the history of the United States, and marked the triumph of the “greatest generation” of Americans serving in the factories or on the front lines. This triumph is predicated on the Nazi enemy. WithoutNazism, the mass-unemployment of the depression would have lingered into the future. Hinting at this connection, the film makes specific overtures to the nature of employment “obligations” in relationship to fighting Nazism. Looking closely at the film, I reveal how it expresses an unconscious dependence upon the Nazi villain. What is more, I shall contend that the film makes evident this desire for the Nazi through its braiding of cinema writ large with the existence of Nazism. Without the Nazi villain, we lose the cinema. In our desire for employment, we create Nazis on screen that stimulate our desire for the Nazi enemy. Paradoxically, the Nazi form is a form we create to grasp for employment in a quest for social care. As an evocative depiction of this multi-generational quest, Inglorious Basterds discloses and implicates spectators in this repressed desire and permits us to reorganize our political and aesthetic economies around social provisioning rather than war.
@moneyontheleft
https://www.facebook.com/moneyontheleft/
http://modern-money-humanities.webflow.io/

In this lecture, “Demystifying Abstraction,” artist Jessica Singerman shares a brief history of abstraction, and talks about her painting process, inspiration, ...

In this lecture, “Demystifying Abstraction,” artist Jessica Singerman shares a brief history of abstraction, and talks about her painting process, inspiration, life as an artist, and why making art matters. The talk is followed by a Q&A session where she goes into more detail about her education, philosophy, and where art comes from. The lecture, given on Wednesday April 25, is part of the Charlotte Millennial ArtProgram series at ElderGallery in Charlotte, NC.
www.jessicasingerman.com

In this lecture, “Demystifying Abstraction,” artist Jessica Singerman shares a brief history of abstraction, and talks about her painting process, inspiration, life as an artist, and why making art matters. The talk is followed by a Q&A session where she goes into more detail about her education, philosophy, and where art comes from. The lecture, given on Wednesday April 25, is part of the Charlotte Millennial ArtProgram series at ElderGallery in Charlotte, NC.
www.jessicasingerman.com

This is video # 2 in EISM course on the DefinitiveTheory of Management.
"When I tell people that there is a definitive way to understand management, I think most people - especially those with management experience - are a little skeptical and I certainly understand why. If you bear with me, however, you’ll see that this is exactly what we have. We have a definitive theory of management, which we’re defining as the science of fuller being. I say science because that’s exactly what it is. And I say fuller being because that’s exactly what everybody’s after – we want to avoid extinction and live forever as a species. So let’s take this one step at a time.
In the first video, we started at a higher level of abstraction than most people are used to when it comes to thinking about management. In this video I want to explain why this is so important and in future videos I plan to show how thinking on the wrong level of abstraction leads to ideas that are simply wrong, or into projects that are doomed to fail.
So, first of all what is abstraction? Abstraction is simply the process of going from thinking about specific things to thinking about more general concepts, usually with some sort of problem-solving goal in mind. When we go from thinking about how one specific company functions to thinking about how all companies function, then to thinking about how the whole world functions, and from there we ask ourselves how the universe functions, and maybe what happened at the Big Bang, we've engaged in thinking at successively higher levels of abstraction. This process of abstracting from a specific notion to more general concepts is thought to be connected to the evolution of human language and intelligence. In fact, most intelligence tests are basically proxies that measure a person's ability to understand and work with abstract concepts.
The key to understanding why abstraction is so important is because the level of abstraction on which we begin sets the limit on our ability to solve problems. To illustrate what I mean, imagine being the captain of a ship that's approaching an iceberg. Imagine that you're in one of the control rooms but you're not aware of the iceberg and for whatever reason your radars are not working. Because of this you're concerned with some lesser issue in the control room. In this scenario, your inability to understand the situation at a higher level is putting you and your ship at risk. If you lifted your thinking to see the bigger picture, you would understand that the real problem is not the one you're trying to solve. The real problem is the approaching iceberg.
In a similar way, the current crisis in management, which is manifest in our inability to deal with things like the economy and climate change and war, springs from our inability to understand the cause and effect of it all at the highest level of abstraction. We simply don’t understand root causes.
In the next few videos, I'm going to argue qualitatively and visually – but I will also give you access to the physics and the math - that this inability to rise to the highest levels of abstraction is the main reason there’s so much confusion not only in our companies but in our cities and in our thinking in general. I hope you'll stay tuned because what's coming is really important for everything you care about."

This is video # 2 in EISM course on the DefinitiveTheory of Management.
"When I tell people that there is a definitive way to understand management, I think most people - especially those with management experience - are a little skeptical and I certainly understand why. If you bear with me, however, you’ll see that this is exactly what we have. We have a definitive theory of management, which we’re defining as the science of fuller being. I say science because that’s exactly what it is. And I say fuller being because that’s exactly what everybody’s after – we want to avoid extinction and live forever as a species. So let’s take this one step at a time.
In the first video, we started at a higher level of abstraction than most people are used to when it comes to thinking about management. In this video I want to explain why this is so important and in future videos I plan to show how thinking on the wrong level of abstraction leads to ideas that are simply wrong, or into projects that are doomed to fail.
So, first of all what is abstraction? Abstraction is simply the process of going from thinking about specific things to thinking about more general concepts, usually with some sort of problem-solving goal in mind. When we go from thinking about how one specific company functions to thinking about how all companies function, then to thinking about how the whole world functions, and from there we ask ourselves how the universe functions, and maybe what happened at the Big Bang, we've engaged in thinking at successively higher levels of abstraction. This process of abstracting from a specific notion to more general concepts is thought to be connected to the evolution of human language and intelligence. In fact, most intelligence tests are basically proxies that measure a person's ability to understand and work with abstract concepts.
The key to understanding why abstraction is so important is because the level of abstraction on which we begin sets the limit on our ability to solve problems. To illustrate what I mean, imagine being the captain of a ship that's approaching an iceberg. Imagine that you're in one of the control rooms but you're not aware of the iceberg and for whatever reason your radars are not working. Because of this you're concerned with some lesser issue in the control room. In this scenario, your inability to understand the situation at a higher level is putting you and your ship at risk. If you lifted your thinking to see the bigger picture, you would understand that the real problem is not the one you're trying to solve. The real problem is the approaching iceberg.
In a similar way, the current crisis in management, which is manifest in our inability to deal with things like the economy and climate change and war, springs from our inability to understand the cause and effect of it all at the highest level of abstraction. We simply don’t understand root causes.
In the next few videos, I'm going to argue qualitatively and visually – but I will also give you access to the physics and the math - that this inability to rise to the highest levels of abstraction is the main reason there’s so much confusion not only in our companies but in our cities and in our thinking in general. I hope you'll stay tuned because what's coming is really important for everything you care about."

Abstraction Artist: Anne Marchand Documentary

Abstract painting can thrust us into the unknown, immersing us in the midst of liminal visual and emotional experiences, without fixed name or context. This kin...

Abstract painting can thrust us into the unknown, immersing us in the midst of liminal visual and emotional experiences, without fixed name or context. This kind of art is full of risk and unexpected reward, asking the viewer to take a fraught journey right along with the artist.
Anne Marchand’s paintings transport us into virtual worlds that form themselves before our eyes.She presents visions of a reality that is alive with shifting space, moving color, and animated lines. These phenomena are embodied in the material reality of paint, along with a range of materials embedded in the work’s surface.
In Marchand’s work over the past ten years, the emotional range, poetic import, and inner structures have evolved significantly. What remains consistent is this artist’s pursuit of a quality of mystery and sensuousness in ever-changing scenarios of transformation.

Abstract painting can thrust us into the unknown, immersing us in the midst of liminal visual and emotional experiences, without fixed name or context. This kind of art is full of risk and unexpected reward, asking the viewer to take a fraught journey right along with the artist.
Anne Marchand’s paintings transport us into virtual worlds that form themselves before our eyes.She presents visions of a reality that is alive with shifting space, moving color, and animated lines. These phenomena are embodied in the material reality of paint, along with a range of materials embedded in the work’s surface.
In Marchand’s work over the past ten years, the emotional range, poetic import, and inner structures have evolved significantly. What remains consistent is this artist’s pursuit of a quality of mystery and sensuousness in ever-changing scenarios of transformation.

Birth of a Painting Series XII: World in Abstraction

This series, World of Abstraction, my paintings are based upon philosophical ideas and addressing the unknown. Paintings by Denise Hartley.
Copyright 2018.
htt...

This series, World of Abstraction, my paintings are based upon philosophical ideas and addressing the unknown. Paintings by Denise Hartley.
Copyright 2018.
http://www.dahartley.com
“Passage Way”, mixed media on wood, gold leaf, 4’ x 6’, 2002. Private collection.
“Passage Way”, the opening to another dimension.
“Mitochondria I, Mitochondria II, mixed media on wood, gold leaf, 4’ x 6’, 2002. Private collections.
Each of our cells can contain thousands of mitochondria. They are used by our bodies to convert molecules into energy.
“JadeDisc”, acrylic paint on canvas, 4’ x 6’, 2002.
“Jade Disc”, called a bi disc, is a flat jade disc, with a circular hole in the center. They were used in Neolithic times, burial objects, undecorated, about 3000 B.C.E. The jade objects represent Heaven and were laid on the diseased.
“Tao”, mixed media, acrylic on canvas, 4’ x 6’, 2002.
This painting represents the beginning of the universe. The red rays piercing the disc, are the sparks that create the Ten ThousandThings in our existence.
"Silent Passage", oil on gessoed wood, 4' x 6', 2003.
The reason water can keep changing its form is because it is essentially formless. Its form is determined by what is around it. Put it in a cup, and it will be cup-shaped. Put it in a ravine, and it will be river-shaped. It needs no form of its own, because it harmonizes with everything around it, taking other beings as its outline, instead of imposing itself upon others. Lao Tzu, The Tao Te Ching.
“Zen Drawing”, mixed media on wood, 3’ x 4’, 2002. Private Collection.
Enlightenment, the first principle is possible acknowledging the everything and everyone is Buddha-nature. Enlightenment is possible to everyone. Enlightenment in Buddhism, or for the Taoist sage. is not expressible in words, or logical thought. Intuitive understanding is necessary, acknowledging the eternity is here and now.
Thank you for watching!

This series, World of Abstraction, my paintings are based upon philosophical ideas and addressing the unknown. Paintings by Denise Hartley.
Copyright 2018.
http://www.dahartley.com
“Passage Way”, mixed media on wood, gold leaf, 4’ x 6’, 2002. Private collection.
“Passage Way”, the opening to another dimension.
“Mitochondria I, Mitochondria II, mixed media on wood, gold leaf, 4’ x 6’, 2002. Private collections.
Each of our cells can contain thousands of mitochondria. They are used by our bodies to convert molecules into energy.
“JadeDisc”, acrylic paint on canvas, 4’ x 6’, 2002.
“Jade Disc”, called a bi disc, is a flat jade disc, with a circular hole in the center. They were used in Neolithic times, burial objects, undecorated, about 3000 B.C.E. The jade objects represent Heaven and were laid on the diseased.
“Tao”, mixed media, acrylic on canvas, 4’ x 6’, 2002.
This painting represents the beginning of the universe. The red rays piercing the disc, are the sparks that create the Ten ThousandThings in our existence.
"Silent Passage", oil on gessoed wood, 4' x 6', 2003.
The reason water can keep changing its form is because it is essentially formless. Its form is determined by what is around it. Put it in a cup, and it will be cup-shaped. Put it in a ravine, and it will be river-shaped. It needs no form of its own, because it harmonizes with everything around it, taking other beings as its outline, instead of imposing itself upon others. Lao Tzu, The Tao Te Ching.
“Zen Drawing”, mixed media on wood, 3’ x 4’, 2002. Private Collection.
Enlightenment, the first principle is possible acknowledging the everything and everyone is Buddha-nature. Enlightenment is possible to everyone. Enlightenment in Buddhism, or for the Taoist sage. is not expressible in words, or logical thought. Intuitive understanding is necessary, acknowledging the eternity is here and now.
Thank you for watching!

Enter into Abstraction with Acrylic Ink Droplets

I'm new at this, so feel free to laugh! I'm a photographer, working my way into the digital age, and thought I'd share some tips and tricks I've learned about ...

I'm new at this, so feel free to laugh! I'm a photographer, working my way into the digital age, and thought I'd share some tips and tricks I've learned about specialized/trick/abstract photography along the way (and I'm still learning).
This episode is about using acrylic in in a fishtank of water to get visually interesting abstracts. You can see full albums of this work at my facebook page:
https://www.facebook.com/richparkerimage
I'm working on a promo website, et cetera, but it's not ready for prime time yet.
So watch, comment, enjoy, and hopefully you'll find something useful from the video.

I'm new at this, so feel free to laugh! I'm a photographer, working my way into the digital age, and thought I'd share some tips and tricks I've learned about specialized/trick/abstract photography along the way (and I'm still learning).
This episode is about using acrylic in in a fishtank of water to get visually interesting abstracts. You can see full albums of this work at my facebook page:
https://www.facebook.com/richparkerimage
I'm working on a promo website, et cetera, but it's not ready for prime time yet.
So watch, comment, enjoy, and hopefully you'll find something useful from the video.

We present an interactive method that allows users to easily abstract complex 3D models with only a few strokes. The key idea is to employ well-known Gestalt pr...

We present an interactive method that allows users to easily abstract complex 3D models with only a few strokes. The key idea is to employ well-known Gestalt principles to help generalizing user inputs into a full model abstraction while accounting for form, perceptual patterns, and semantics of the model. Using these principles, we alleviate the user’s need to explicitly define shape abstractions. We utilize structural characteristics such as repetitions, regularity and similarity to transform user strokes into full 3D abstractions. As the user sketches over shape elements, we identify Gestalt groups and later abstract them to maintain their structural meaning. Unlike previous approaches, we operate directly on the geometric elements, in a sense applying Gestalt principles in 3D. We demonstrate the effectiveness of our approach with a series of experiments, including a variety of complex models and two extensive user studies to evaluate our framework.
Julian Kratt, TillNiese, Ruizhen Hu, Hui Huang, Ssören Pirk, Andrei Sharf, Daniel Cohen-Or, OliverDeussen
Sketching in Gestalt Space: InteractiveShape Abstraction through Perceptual Reasoning
Computer GraphicsForum (to appear).(to appear) (2018), P. (to appear)

We present an interactive method that allows users to easily abstract complex 3D models with only a few strokes. The key idea is to employ well-known Gestalt principles to help generalizing user inputs into a full model abstraction while accounting for form, perceptual patterns, and semantics of the model. Using these principles, we alleviate the user’s need to explicitly define shape abstractions. We utilize structural characteristics such as repetitions, regularity and similarity to transform user strokes into full 3D abstractions. As the user sketches over shape elements, we identify Gestalt groups and later abstract them to maintain their structural meaning. Unlike previous approaches, we operate directly on the geometric elements, in a sense applying Gestalt principles in 3D. We demonstrate the effectiveness of our approach with a series of experiments, including a variety of complex models and two extensive user studies to evaluate our framework.
Julian Kratt, TillNiese, Ruizhen Hu, Hui Huang, Ssören Pirk, Andrei Sharf, Daniel Cohen-Or, OliverDeussen
Sketching in Gestalt Space: InteractiveShape Abstraction through Perceptual Reasoning
Computer GraphicsForum (to appear).(to appear) (2018), P. (to appear)

Agent of Change: Thought Into Form "Living in Abstraction"

Living an abstract life is a lifestyle, something that is embraced every day and in the every day, which allows me to live in a place where time, space, metapho...

Living an abstract life is a lifestyle, something that is embraced every day and in the every day, which allows me to live in a place where time, space, metaphor, personal symbols and icons, and messages from a higher place dictate and expand my ideas and decisions. There are some aspects to embracing and maintaining this state of being, of living. Today, I’m going to share the aspects which mean the most to me.
For more info, visit www.thoughtintoform.org

Living an abstract life is a lifestyle, something that is embraced every day and in the every day, which allows me to live in a place where time, space, metaphor, personal symbols and icons, and messages from a higher place dictate and expand my ideas and decisions. There are some aspects to embracing and maintaining this state of being, of living. Today, I’m going to share the aspects which mean the most to me.
For more info, visit www.thoughtintoform.org

https://www.fiverr.com/dannying
intro videos maker - In this video I'm going to show you how to make an intro video for your website using your TEXTIntro Mak...

https://www.fiverr.com/dannying
intro videos maker - In this video I'm going to show you how to make an intro video for your website using your TEXTIntroMakerFreeOnline | How to make a free intro for your youtube videos Category how to make an intro without downloads, In Explore, you can discover and watch new music, news, sports, and trailers from ShowTodayTV best creators, brands, and Channels
A far more stylish and professional way of going about it is to make an intro that gently leads into the main content of the video
How to make an intro 2018 Mp3 song file download now in 320 kbps Video how to make an intro beginner, All video with tags how to make an intro beginner | Website offers the hottest video clips, troll clips of girls, kids, animals
top 5 free windows live movie maker intro templates #2.
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-
Please watch: "Your logo in a classic car add your logo to a classic car to promoted your brand. "
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=do0oUopn6pk
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-

https://www.fiverr.com/dannying
intro videos maker - In this video I'm going to show you how to make an intro video for your website using your TEXTIntroMakerFreeOnline | How to make a free intro for your youtube videos Category how to make an intro without downloads, In Explore, you can discover and watch new music, news, sports, and trailers from ShowTodayTV best creators, brands, and Channels
A far more stylish and professional way of going about it is to make an intro that gently leads into the main content of the video
How to make an intro 2018 Mp3 song file download now in 320 kbps Video how to make an intro beginner, All video with tags how to make an intro beginner | Website offers the hottest video clips, troll clips of girls, kids, animals
top 5 free windows live movie maker intro templates #2.
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-
Please watch: "Your logo in a classic car add your logo to a classic car to promoted your brand. "
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=do0oUopn6pk
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-

Abstraction UHC Season 1 Episode 4 ~ Potsie, Dianab and I are in Frenzy apparently

Hello and welcome to Abstraction Season 1!
Abstraction is an RR organized by Mrsonicfan and MaverickMC where each season we try pairing cool gamemode combinatio...

Hello and welcome to Abstraction Season 1!
Abstraction is an RR organized by Mrsonicfan and MaverickMC where each season we try pairing cool gamemode combinations together while maintaining a rather different roster.
For our first season, we will be doing random teams of four, with two gamemodes. The first being compensation, where When a player on a team dies, the player's max health is divided up and added to the max health of the player's teammates, along with gapples healing 20% of your maximum amount of health. The second gamemode being Quad Soul-Brothers, where at the beginning of Episode 1, each player on a team is scattered into a separate world, only to be rescattered together in Episode 5.
Teams:
Blue:
----------
5kylord: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCz0WSqA-RjzXxILgd6bpKNA
AJSteel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCTszFWyGHxoZYI5yFDIih7g
Austronomical: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClPQXE9ZHWSSWQswECK-1dw
MaverickMC: https://www.youtube.com/user/27FrenchToast27
Green:
----------
Bradzi: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqug0Bwki46xfmbHy8JnLGA
Eyehasnoidea: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCDJdzMb30DDlQP8f3k6QgCA
Glen: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCZ7D2povbdKMkqYMdNKQcxA
Topspinpiggles: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCq4wmpWYxxj0_9Gg2Ywz76g
Purple:
----------
Bacan: https://www.youtube.com/user/bacanandeggs
LegoBeast: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLZtmd4Jo607GC5X-qm18QA
Mrsonicfan: https://www.youtube.com/user/Mrsonicfanify
OG_Ash: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCMofxr2RO4NwJaTB2voTGRg
Orange:
----------
CH0CK: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCUvyjIoaDLIGpI9Wevcq-gg
Pelargo: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCOtDZUQb2GcYM6AiDmt1GFA
Potsie: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC641HaOiHNo_lr09MeHYwaQ
SD_UHC: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClFele72MNVn1_0Z6u_l2KQ
Pink:
----------
Aunk: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCr44j5vxSZwAQGeE9L-HITA
Lucity: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCl2uBeSOjqzBzS9H5J_jVnA
Meowzerzz: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCVlfIV2O0PRsntvrQYCH2KQ
MercuryParadox: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCbMQuK0B3BRZmXcWb1NzmCQ
Yellow:
----------
PenguinBagels: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC5WFN-Jj901IgSeNfMNvtPg
Sigilyph: https://www.youtube.com/user/eternalduskmcpvp
Sluggyg: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCH8vIvAvlOvYMKxk19fzyyA
WintherWaffle: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCXlSL1XDyi8BeSW96eEnQWA
Red:
----------
Apex_Twinkie: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC1cY2YELO_O8Gnae1eHrHOA
Blazerr: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqMLJVRp14kr5DGuAw7TH3Q
MajorWoof: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCE2isSMpPTI4CJ-9NZVrCQw
TheBananaMonster: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC1ltZRtlESbvYJOuv-Ndgpw
- - -
Credits:
Intro creation by Mrsonicfan
Render creation by Pelargo
Hosted by CountryCutie
Organization by Mrsonicfan & MaverickMC
Music: La Lune - Madeon
- - -
I hope you all enjoy the first season of Abstraction UHC :)

Hello and welcome to Abstraction Season 1!
Abstraction is an RR organized by Mrsonicfan and MaverickMC where each season we try pairing cool gamemode combinations together while maintaining a rather different roster.
For our first season, we will be doing random teams of four, with two gamemodes. The first being compensation, where When a player on a team dies, the player's max health is divided up and added to the max health of the player's teammates, along with gapples healing 20% of your maximum amount of health. The second gamemode being Quad Soul-Brothers, where at the beginning of Episode 1, each player on a team is scattered into a separate world, only to be rescattered together in Episode 5.
Teams:
Blue:
----------
5kylord: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCz0WSqA-RjzXxILgd6bpKNA
AJSteel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCTszFWyGHxoZYI5yFDIih7g
Austronomical: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClPQXE9ZHWSSWQswECK-1dw
MaverickMC: https://www.youtube.com/user/27FrenchToast27
Green:
----------
Bradzi: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqug0Bwki46xfmbHy8JnLGA
Eyehasnoidea: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCDJdzMb30DDlQP8f3k6QgCA
Glen: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCZ7D2povbdKMkqYMdNKQcxA
Topspinpiggles: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCq4wmpWYxxj0_9Gg2Ywz76g
Purple:
----------
Bacan: https://www.youtube.com/user/bacanandeggs
LegoBeast: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLZtmd4Jo607GC5X-qm18QA
Mrsonicfan: https://www.youtube.com/user/Mrsonicfanify
OG_Ash: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCMofxr2RO4NwJaTB2voTGRg
Orange:
----------
CH0CK: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCUvyjIoaDLIGpI9Wevcq-gg
Pelargo: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCOtDZUQb2GcYM6AiDmt1GFA
Potsie: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC641HaOiHNo_lr09MeHYwaQ
SD_UHC: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClFele72MNVn1_0Z6u_l2KQ
Pink:
----------
Aunk: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCr44j5vxSZwAQGeE9L-HITA
Lucity: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCl2uBeSOjqzBzS9H5J_jVnA
Meowzerzz: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCVlfIV2O0PRsntvrQYCH2KQ
MercuryParadox: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCbMQuK0B3BRZmXcWb1NzmCQ
Yellow:
----------
PenguinBagels: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC5WFN-Jj901IgSeNfMNvtPg
Sigilyph: https://www.youtube.com/user/eternalduskmcpvp
Sluggyg: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCH8vIvAvlOvYMKxk19fzyyA
WintherWaffle: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCXlSL1XDyi8BeSW96eEnQWA
Red:
----------
Apex_Twinkie: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC1cY2YELO_O8Gnae1eHrHOA
Blazerr: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqMLJVRp14kr5DGuAw7TH3Q
MajorWoof: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCE2isSMpPTI4CJ-9NZVrCQw
TheBananaMonster: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC1ltZRtlESbvYJOuv-Ndgpw
- - -
Credits:
Intro creation by Mrsonicfan
Render creation by Pelargo
Hosted by CountryCutie
Organization by Mrsonicfan & MaverickMC
Music: La Lune - Madeon
- - -
I hope you all enjoy the first season of Abstraction UHC :)

Abstraction UHC: S1E4 - Austro Dies In This Episode

Hello and welcome to Abstraction Season 1!
Abstraction is an RR organized by Mrsonicfan and MaverickMC where each season we try pairing cool gamemode combinatio...

Hello and welcome to Abstraction Season 1!
Abstraction is an RR organized by Mrsonicfan and MaverickMC where each season we try pairing cool gamemode combinations together while maintaining a rather different roster.
For our first season, we will be doing random teams of four, with two gamemodes. The first being compensation, where When a player on a team dies, the player's max health is divided up and added to the max health of the player's teammates, along with gapples healing 20% of your maximum amount of health. The second gamemode being Quad Soul-Brothers, where at the beginning of Episode 1, each player on a team is scattered into a separate world, only to be rescattered together in Episode 5.
Teams:
Blue:
----------
5kylord: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCz0WSqA-RjzXxILgd6bpKNA
AJSteel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCTszFWyGHxoZYI5yFDIih7g
Austronomical: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClPQXE9ZHWSSWQswECK-1dw
MaverickMC: https://www.youtube.com/user/27FrenchToast27
Green:
----------
Bradzi: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqug0Bwki46xfmbHy8JnLGA
Eyehasnoidea: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCDJdzMb30DDlQP8f3k6QgCA
Glen: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCZ7D2povbdKMkqYMdNKQcxA
Topspinpiggles: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCq4wmpWYxxj0_9Gg2Ywz76g
Purple:
----------
Bacan: https://www.youtube.com/user/bacanandeggs
LegoBeast: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLZtmd4Jo607GC5X-qm18QA
Mrsonicfan: https://www.youtube.com/user/Mrsonicfanify
OG_Ash: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCMofxr2RO4NwJaTB2voTGRg
Orange:
----------
CH0CK: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCUvyjIoaDLIGpI9Wevcq-gg
Pelargo: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCOtDZUQb2GcYM6AiDmt1GFA
Potsie: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC641HaOiHNo_lr09MeHYwaQ
SD_UHC: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClFele72MNVn1_0Z6u_l2KQ
Pink:
----------
Aunk: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCr44j5vxSZwAQGeE9L-HITA
Lucity: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCl2uBeSOjqzBzS9H5J_jVnA
Meowzerzz: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCVlfIV2O0PRsntvrQYCH2KQ
MercuryParadox: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCbMQuK0B3BRZmXcWb1NzmCQ
Yellow:
----------
PenguinBagels: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC5WFN-Jj901IgSeNfMNvtPg
Sigilyph: https://www.youtube.com/user/eternalduskmcpvp
Sluggyg: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCH8vIvAvlOvYMKxk19fzyyA
WintherWaffle: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCXlSL1XDyi8BeSW96eEnQWA
Red:
----------
Apex_Twinkie: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC1cY2YELO_O8Gnae1eHrHOA
Blazerr: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqMLJVRp14kr5DGuAw7TH3Q
MajorWoof: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCE2isSMpPTI4CJ-9NZVrCQw
TheBananaMonster: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC1ltZRtlESbvYJOuv-Ndgpw
- - -
Credits:
Intro creation by Mrsonicfan
Render creation by Pelargo
Hosted by CountryCutie
Organization by Mrsonicfan & MaverickMC
Music: La Lune - Madeon
- - -
I hope you all enjoy the first season of Abstraction UHC

Hello and welcome to Abstraction Season 1!
Abstraction is an RR organized by Mrsonicfan and MaverickMC where each season we try pairing cool gamemode combinations together while maintaining a rather different roster.
For our first season, we will be doing random teams of four, with two gamemodes. The first being compensation, where When a player on a team dies, the player's max health is divided up and added to the max health of the player's teammates, along with gapples healing 20% of your maximum amount of health. The second gamemode being Quad Soul-Brothers, where at the beginning of Episode 1, each player on a team is scattered into a separate world, only to be rescattered together in Episode 5.
Teams:
Blue:
----------
5kylord: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCz0WSqA-RjzXxILgd6bpKNA
AJSteel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCTszFWyGHxoZYI5yFDIih7g
Austronomical: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClPQXE9ZHWSSWQswECK-1dw
MaverickMC: https://www.youtube.com/user/27FrenchToast27
Green:
----------
Bradzi: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqug0Bwki46xfmbHy8JnLGA
Eyehasnoidea: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCDJdzMb30DDlQP8f3k6QgCA
Glen: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCZ7D2povbdKMkqYMdNKQcxA
Topspinpiggles: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCq4wmpWYxxj0_9Gg2Ywz76g
Purple:
----------
Bacan: https://www.youtube.com/user/bacanandeggs
LegoBeast: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLZtmd4Jo607GC5X-qm18QA
Mrsonicfan: https://www.youtube.com/user/Mrsonicfanify
OG_Ash: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCMofxr2RO4NwJaTB2voTGRg
Orange:
----------
CH0CK: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCUvyjIoaDLIGpI9Wevcq-gg
Pelargo: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCOtDZUQb2GcYM6AiDmt1GFA
Potsie: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC641HaOiHNo_lr09MeHYwaQ
SD_UHC: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClFele72MNVn1_0Z6u_l2KQ
Pink:
----------
Aunk: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCr44j5vxSZwAQGeE9L-HITA
Lucity: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCl2uBeSOjqzBzS9H5J_jVnA
Meowzerzz: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCVlfIV2O0PRsntvrQYCH2KQ
MercuryParadox: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCbMQuK0B3BRZmXcWb1NzmCQ
Yellow:
----------
PenguinBagels: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC5WFN-Jj901IgSeNfMNvtPg
Sigilyph: https://www.youtube.com/user/eternalduskmcpvp
Sluggyg: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCH8vIvAvlOvYMKxk19fzyyA
WintherWaffle: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCXlSL1XDyi8BeSW96eEnQWA
Red:
----------
Apex_Twinkie: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC1cY2YELO_O8Gnae1eHrHOA
Blazerr: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqMLJVRp14kr5DGuAw7TH3Q
MajorWoof: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCE2isSMpPTI4CJ-9NZVrCQw
TheBananaMonster: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC1ltZRtlESbvYJOuv-Ndgpw
- - -
Credits:
Intro creation by Mrsonicfan
Render creation by Pelargo
Hosted by CountryCutie
Organization by Mrsonicfan & MaverickMC
Music: La Lune - Madeon
- - -
I hope you all enjoy the first season of Abstraction UHC

Abstraction UHC : Ep2 - Map to Diamonds

Hello and welcome to Abstraction Season 1!
Abstraction is an RR organized by Mrsonicfan and MaverickMC where each season we try pairing cool gamemode combinatio...

Hello and welcome to Abstraction Season 1!
Abstraction is an RR organized by Mrsonicfan and MaverickMC where each season we try pairing cool gamemode combinations together while maintaining a rather different roster.
For our first season, we will be doing random teams of four, with two gamemodes. The first being compensation, where When a player on a team dies, the player's max health is divided up and added to the max health of the player's teammates, along with gapples healing 20% of your maximum amount of health. The second gamemode being Quad Soul-Brothers, where at the beginning of Episode 1, each player on a team is scattered into a separate world, only to be rescattered together in Episode 5.
Teams:
Blue:
----------
5kylord: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCz0WSqA-RjzXxILgd6bpKNA
AJSteel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCTszFWyGHxoZYI5yFDIih7g
Austronomical: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClPQXE9ZHWSSWQswECK-1dw
MaverickMC: https://www.youtube.com/user/27FrenchToast27
Green:
----------
Bradzi: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqug0Bwki46xfmbHy8JnLGA
Eyehasnoidea: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCDJdzMb30DDlQP8f3k6QgCA
Glen: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCZ7D2povbdKMkqYMdNKQcxA
Topspinpiggles: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCq4wmpWYxxj0_9Gg2Ywz76g
Purple:
----------
Bacan: https://www.youtube.com/user/bacanandeggs
LegoBeast: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLZtmd4Jo607GC5X-qm18QA
Mrsonicfan: https://www.youtube.com/user/Mrsonicfanify
OG_Ash: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCMofxr2RO4NwJaTB2voTGRg
Orange:
----------
CH0CK: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCUvyjIoaDLIGpI9Wevcq-gg
Pelargo: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCOtDZUQb2GcYM6AiDmt1GFA
Potsie: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC641HaOiHNo_lr09MeHYwaQ
SD_UHC: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClFele72MNVn1_0Z6u_l2KQ
Pink:
----------
Aunk: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCr44j5vxSZwAQGeE9L-HITA
Lucity: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCl2uBeSOjqzBzS9H5J_jVnA
Meowzerzz: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCVlfIV2O0PRsntvrQYCH2KQ
MercuryParadox: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCbMQuK0B3BRZmXcWb1NzmCQ
Yellow:
----------
PenguinBagels: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC5WFN-Jj901IgSeNfMNvtPg
Sigilyph: https://www.youtube.com/user/eternalduskmcpvp
Sluggyg: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCH8vIvAvlOvYMKxk19fzyyA
WintherWaffle: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCXlSL1XDyi8BeSW96eEnQWA
Red:
----------
Apex_Twinkie: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC1cY2YELO_O8Gnae1eHrHOA
Blazerr: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqMLJVRp14kr5DGuAw7TH3Q
MajorWoof: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCE2isSMpPTI4CJ-9NZVrCQw
TheBananaMonster: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC1ltZRtlESbvYJOuv-Ndgpw
- - -
Credits:
Intro creation by Mrsonicfan
Render creation by Pelargo
Hosted by CountryCutie
Organization by Mrsonicfan & MaverickMC
Music: La Lune - Madeon
- - -
I hope you all enjoy the first season of Abstraction UHC :)

Hello and welcome to Abstraction Season 1!
Abstraction is an RR organized by Mrsonicfan and MaverickMC where each season we try pairing cool gamemode combinations together while maintaining a rather different roster.
For our first season, we will be doing random teams of four, with two gamemodes. The first being compensation, where When a player on a team dies, the player's max health is divided up and added to the max health of the player's teammates, along with gapples healing 20% of your maximum amount of health. The second gamemode being Quad Soul-Brothers, where at the beginning of Episode 1, each player on a team is scattered into a separate world, only to be rescattered together in Episode 5.
Teams:
Blue:
----------
5kylord: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCz0WSqA-RjzXxILgd6bpKNA
AJSteel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCTszFWyGHxoZYI5yFDIih7g
Austronomical: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClPQXE9ZHWSSWQswECK-1dw
MaverickMC: https://www.youtube.com/user/27FrenchToast27
Green:
----------
Bradzi: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqug0Bwki46xfmbHy8JnLGA
Eyehasnoidea: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCDJdzMb30DDlQP8f3k6QgCA
Glen: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCZ7D2povbdKMkqYMdNKQcxA
Topspinpiggles: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCq4wmpWYxxj0_9Gg2Ywz76g
Purple:
----------
Bacan: https://www.youtube.com/user/bacanandeggs
LegoBeast: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLZtmd4Jo607GC5X-qm18QA
Mrsonicfan: https://www.youtube.com/user/Mrsonicfanify
OG_Ash: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCMofxr2RO4NwJaTB2voTGRg
Orange:
----------
CH0CK: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCUvyjIoaDLIGpI9Wevcq-gg
Pelargo: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCOtDZUQb2GcYM6AiDmt1GFA
Potsie: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC641HaOiHNo_lr09MeHYwaQ
SD_UHC: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClFele72MNVn1_0Z6u_l2KQ
Pink:
----------
Aunk: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCr44j5vxSZwAQGeE9L-HITA
Lucity: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCl2uBeSOjqzBzS9H5J_jVnA
Meowzerzz: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCVlfIV2O0PRsntvrQYCH2KQ
MercuryParadox: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCbMQuK0B3BRZmXcWb1NzmCQ
Yellow:
----------
PenguinBagels: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC5WFN-Jj901IgSeNfMNvtPg
Sigilyph: https://www.youtube.com/user/eternalduskmcpvp
Sluggyg: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCH8vIvAvlOvYMKxk19fzyyA
WintherWaffle: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCXlSL1XDyi8BeSW96eEnQWA
Red:
----------
Apex_Twinkie: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC1cY2YELO_O8Gnae1eHrHOA
Blazerr: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqMLJVRp14kr5DGuAw7TH3Q
MajorWoof: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCE2isSMpPTI4CJ-9NZVrCQw
TheBananaMonster: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC1ltZRtlESbvYJOuv-Ndgpw
- - -
Credits:
Intro creation by Mrsonicfan
Render creation by Pelargo
Hosted by CountryCutie
Organization by Mrsonicfan & MaverickMC
Music: La Lune - Madeon
- - -
I hope you all enjoy the first season of Abstraction UHC :)

Freedom of InformationRequest on Sellafield's Fresh Water Abstraction from the River Ehen.
Dear Ms Birkby,
Apologies for the delay in responding to your request for information.
I have made enquiries on your behalf and the answers to your questions are
below in red*
1. Will the NDA cease abstraction from the river Ehen in order to
protect endangered fresh water pearl mussels?
(Abstraction license no 2774005004. 32.4 MEGA Litres per day for
Sellafield evaporative cooling and process water.)
*The NDA operates in full compliance with this licence and there are
currently no plans to cease abstraction.*
2. Does the NDA use borehole water to compensate (put into the Ehen) for
the 32.4 MEGA Litres abstracted daily from the Ehen?
*No.*
3. If so where does the borehole water come from?
*N/A*
4. What research has been done by the NDA to look at the impacts on the
river Ehen from the decades of continuous downstream abstraction and
"compensation."
*No research has been carried out into this area.*
If you are unhappy with our response to your request you may ask for an
internal review. Please contact [1][email address] in the first
instance.
If you are not content with the outcome of the internal review, you have
the right to apply directly to the Information Commissioner for a
decision. The InformationCommissioner can be contacted at:
WycliffeHouse, WaterLane, Wilmslow, Cheshire, SK9 5AF
Publication - please note that your request and our response may be
published on our website. This is because information disclosed in
accordance with the FOI Act is disclosed to the public at large. We will,
of course, remove your personal information (e.g. your name and contact
details) from the versions published on our website to protect your
personal information from general disclosure.
Kind regards,
Heather Rudd
Paralegal
Nuclear Decommissioning Authority
T: 01925 802515 M: 07889308723
W: [2]http://www.nda.gov.uk Blog: [3]http://nda.blog.gov.uk
Follow us on: [4]Twitter and [5]LinkedIn
[6]Sign up to our e-bulletin
This message and any attachment is intended solely for the addressee and
may contain confidential or legally privileged information. If you have
received this message in error, please send it back to us, and immediately
and permanently delete it. Do not use, copy or disclose the information
contained in this message or in any attachment.
Please consider the environment before printing this email.
https://www.whatdotheyknow.com/request/river_ehen_sellafield_abstractio#incoming-1044335

Freedom of InformationRequest on Sellafield's Fresh Water Abstraction from the River Ehen.
Dear Ms Birkby,
Apologies for the delay in responding to your request for information.
I have made enquiries on your behalf and the answers to your questions are
below in red*
1. Will the NDA cease abstraction from the river Ehen in order to
protect endangered fresh water pearl mussels?
(Abstraction license no 2774005004. 32.4 MEGA Litres per day for
Sellafield evaporative cooling and process water.)
*The NDA operates in full compliance with this licence and there are
currently no plans to cease abstraction.*
2. Does the NDA use borehole water to compensate (put into the Ehen) for
the 32.4 MEGA Litres abstracted daily from the Ehen?
*No.*
3. If so where does the borehole water come from?
*N/A*
4. What research has been done by the NDA to look at the impacts on the
river Ehen from the decades of continuous downstream abstraction and
"compensation."
*No research has been carried out into this area.*
If you are unhappy with our response to your request you may ask for an
internal review. Please contact [1][email address] in the first
instance.
If you are not content with the outcome of the internal review, you have
the right to apply directly to the Information Commissioner for a
decision. The InformationCommissioner can be contacted at:
WycliffeHouse, WaterLane, Wilmslow, Cheshire, SK9 5AF
Publication - please note that your request and our response may be
published on our website. This is because information disclosed in
accordance with the FOI Act is disclosed to the public at large. We will,
of course, remove your personal information (e.g. your name and contact
details) from the versions published on our website to protect your
personal information from general disclosure.
Kind regards,
Heather Rudd
Paralegal
Nuclear Decommissioning Authority
T: 01925 802515 M: 07889308723
W: [2]http://www.nda.gov.uk Blog: [3]http://nda.blog.gov.uk
Follow us on: [4]Twitter and [5]LinkedIn
[6]Sign up to our e-bulletin
This message and any attachment is intended solely for the addressee and
may contain confidential or legally privileged information. If you have
received this message in error, please send it back to us, and immediately
and permanently delete it. Do not use, copy or disclose the information
contained in this message or in any attachment.
Please consider the environment before printing this email.
https://www.whatdotheyknow.com/request/river_ehen_sellafield_abstractio#incoming-1044335

abstraction: How to pronounce abstraction with Phonetic and Examples

This video shows how to pronounce abstraction correctly with phonetic and examples on how to use it
abstraction Definition : a general concept formed by extract...

This video shows how to pronounce abstraction correctly with phonetic and examples on how to use it
abstraction Definition : a general concept formed by extracting common features from specific examples
abstraction Phonetic : æb'strækʃn
abstraction Synonyms : concept, idea, notion, thought, generality, generalization, theory, theorem, formula, hypothesis, speculation, conjecture, supposition, presumption
abstraction Examples :
Through abstraction I aspire towards the infinite rather than the specific, she observes.
It is the perspective of abstract ideality that, just because of its abstraction, is morally justified.
He can flit from populist argument to high brow abstraction and then back into quango-speak and then consultancy jargon with amazing felicity.
1,00,000 words with definition, phonetic and examples are available at www.dictionguru.com

This video shows how to pronounce abstraction correctly with phonetic and examples on how to use it
abstraction Definition : a general concept formed by extracting common features from specific examples
abstraction Phonetic : æb'strækʃn
abstraction Synonyms : concept, idea, notion, thought, generality, generalization, theory, theorem, formula, hypothesis, speculation, conjecture, supposition, presumption
abstraction Examples :
Through abstraction I aspire towards the infinite rather than the specific, she observes.
It is the perspective of abstract ideality that, just because of its abstraction, is morally justified.
He can flit from populist argument to high brow abstraction and then back into quango-speak and then consultancy jargon with amazing felicity.
1,00,000 words with definition, phonetic and examples are available at www.dictionguru.com

Abstractions: Explained

Welcome back to the NightmareExpo!
This channel dives into the dark depths of YouTube and beyond with various analyses and discussions of eerie and disturbing topics.
Tonight, we're diving full-force into a captivating and masterful web-series that's telling its story in a very unique fashion. Enjoy.
Follow me on Twitter:
https://twitter.com/NightmareExpo
Join my Patreon!
https://www.patreon.com/NightmareExpo
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Abstractions:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCWzjTcV73LEvKA3Oy0r6D3Q
NightMind's analysis:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lm9mlc338SU
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Music:
Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Com...

How to Hack an Abstraction: Google Warhol | 09.27.2014

For the launch of a very special October issue of e-flux journal dedicated to Elizabeth Povinelli’s “Quasi-Events,” Brian Kuan Wood sits down with McKenzie Wark to discuss how the consolidation of finance and art asks for an update to the task of what Wark has termed “the hacker class.” If we take art as an expanded notion of design, how can we then intervene into the way contemporary capitalism steals our intellectual labor under the auspices of some mythical form/content divide? And how is that impossible when, after all, I am my own money?

published: 16 Oct 2014

How to paint like Pablo Picasso (Cubism) | IN THE STUDIO

Learn how to paint in the Cubist style of artists Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque in this latest episode of MoMA's IN THE STUDIO with Corey D'Augustine.
See more IN THE STUDIO videos with Corey:
http://bit.ly/2zDkJUB
Subscribe for our latest videos, and invitations to live events: http://mo.ma/youtube
Explore our collection online: http://mo.ma/art
Plan your visit in-person: http://mo.ma/visit
Ad Reinhardt's "How to Look" is available for purchase here:
https://davidzwirnerbooks.com/product/ad-reinhardt-how-to-look-art-comics
Explore the techniques of New York School painters like Kusama, Rothko, and Pollock in MoMA's free, online course, "In the Studio: Postwar AbstractPainting." Sign up: http://mo.ma/inthestudio
___
Featuring Corey D'Augustine, Educator and Independent Conservat...

Sustaining productivity in a software project requires more than clean syntax and efficient process. It requires clear ideas.
Well-abstracted software is flexible in ways its business domain can take advantage of. It enables a sustained, or even accelerated, development pace over the course of a project. Poorly abstracted software tends to calcify, with each new feature being more difficult to the add than the previous.
Unfortunately, there aren’t many tools to directly guide effective abstraction. Refactoring and code smells are too code-centric. Processes such as Domain-Driven Development focus too narrowly on business domain modeling, which is important, but too focused.
In this talk, Drew will attempt to describe how many of the best developers already abstract in software projects....

Patreon Page
If you wish to support me please go to https://www.patreon.com/rainwalker
Thank you :)
--------------------
Index
0:12 Intro
1:46 DefaultState
5:51 Happy
11:35 Angry
15:58 Sad
19:44 Surprised
23:06 Disgust
26:27 Confusion
------------------------------
About This Video
------------------------------
This is a quick tutorial answering a question about Frank Reilly's method and its adaptation in drawing emotions. Thank you for all the questions and please keep them coming :)
For Frank Reilly's method complete video
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IJ1ceKo6MmI&list=PLGqLd8aLnAfFdTKsJsdN2Le4uJZQf5ihl&index=7&t=885s
For the Entire Top 10 methods to draw the head series
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ne4OP-CZUgo&list=PLGqLd8aLnAfFdTKsJs...

published: 07 Apr 2017

Perspectives on system languages and abstraction

Author: Barbara LiskovAbstract:
Barbara Liskov examines the evolution of abstractions, such as processes and software layers, to organize complex systems. Some abstractions are separate service processes invoked by RPC, others are overlaid on a users process by monitors. Many have found their way into system programming languages. Communication is a major issue.
ACM DL: http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=2830903.2830906
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2830903.2830906

The principles of abstraction are drilled into us repeatedly, and we work hard to abstract the layers of our applications. Abstraction between layers is excellent, but what about abstraction within layers, especially the data layer? Many developers still build database-centric applications, and then struggle the day they need an additional or new data source. Learn the reasons why this is a poor design choice, and the best ways to avoid it.

published: 03 Apr 2013

Abstraction Without Regret

Tiark Rompf of EPFL and Purdue University speaks about his LightweightModularStagingFramework, in a talk entitled "Abstraction Without Regret for Efficient Data Processing", at the PDXScala Meetup, 21 October 2014.
Tiark graduated EPFL in the Scala team, where he developed the Lightweight Modular Staging framework (scala-lms.github.io), which compiles domain-specific programs to efficient and parallel code for GPUs, multi-threaded CPUs and clusters. Currently Tiark is a professor at Purdue University and he just got the best paper award in the most prestigious conference in databases, VLDB, for a paper applying the Lightweight Modular Staging technique for databases queries.

published: 06 Nov 2014

Reinventing Abstraction Curated by Raphael Rubinstein at CHEIM & READ

James Kalm, like so many other young artists, arrived in New York to pursue a career as a painter, whatever that meant. It was the late seventies, and the city was in desperate straights, with entire swaths of its neighborhoods crumbling into ruins. Established art hegemonies of Minimalism and Conceptualism were also collapsing. The scene was ripe for new and unprecedented experimental approaches to artistic production, with even the loathed practice of painting given reconsideration. " Reinventing Abstraction: New York Painting in the 1980s" takes a look at some artists who pushed the boundaries of abstraction, and reasserted its validity as a realm of intellectual investigation. Raphael Rubenstein has collected together prime examples of the well, and lesser known painters of this p...

published: 01 Jul 2013

Software Contracts and Abstraction by Specification

published: 07 Feb 2017

24/42: Secret History - Kurt Gödel and the Secrets of Genius (and Abstraction)

The saga continues. It's been a while since I released a video. I hope to have more soon. To keep this project moving, feel free to donate at http://www.garygeck.com

published: 10 Feb 2017

Hilma af Klint - A Pioneer of Abstraction (eng.sub)

Hilma af Klint (October 26, 1862– October 21, 1944) was a Swedish artist and mystic whose paintings were amongst the first abstract art..diagrams, were a visual representation of complex spiritual ideas.
Like Vassily Kandinsky, Piet Mondrian and Kazimir Malevich, who have previously been regarded as the main protagonists of abstract art, Hilma af Klint was influenced by contemporary spiritual movements, such as spiritism, theosophy and, later, anthroposophy. Hilma af Klint’s oeuvre builds on the awareness of a spiritual dimension of consciousness, an aspect that was being marginalised in an increasingly materialistic world. When she painted, she believed that a higher consciousness was speaking through her. In her astonishing works she combines geometric shapes and symbols with ornamentati...

published: 11 Aug 2014

Anatomy of RDD : Deep dive into Spark RDD abstraction

An in depth discussion about Apache SparkRDD abstraction. Presented at Bangalore Apache Spark Meetup by Madhukara Phatak on 28/03/2015.
http://www.meetup.com/Bangalore-Apache-Spark-Meetup/events/220684538/
For slides of this talk, refer
http://www.slideshare.net/datamantra/anatomy-of-rdd
For code, refer
https://github.com/phatak-dev/anatomy-of-rdd
Connect with Madhukara Phatak at
http://www.datamantra.io
http://www.madhukaraphatak.com

published: 31 Mar 2015

19 - C# - OOP - Abstraction & interfaces In Arabic

Network Abstraction at Different Layers of the Stack

As the core network abstractions provided by Neutron is getting widespread usage, newer abstractions for network services (such as service insertion and service chaining) are being worked out by the Neutron community. However, it remains unclear if the provided level of abstraction is suitable at higher layers of the stack. In particular, applications that are used for deploying various workloads may find a different and higher level network abstraction more useful. In this talk we first present the Neutron abstraction for networking resources including the newly developed network services. We then show how different levels of network abstraction can be more useful at higher layers and propose alternative workload-centric abstractions for network resources. In particular, we discuss Heat a...

Abstractions: Explained

Welcome back to the NightmareExpo!
This channel dives into the dark depths of YouTube and beyond with various analyses and discussions of eerie and disturbin...

Welcome back to the NightmareExpo!
This channel dives into the dark depths of YouTube and beyond with various analyses and discussions of eerie and disturbing topics.
Tonight, we're diving full-force into a captivating and masterful web-series that's telling its story in a very unique fashion. Enjoy.
Follow me on Twitter:
https://twitter.com/NightmareExpo
Join my Patreon!
https://www.patreon.com/NightmareExpo
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Abstractions:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCWzjTcV73LEvKA3Oy0r6D3Q
NightMind's analysis:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lm9mlc338SU
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Music:
Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution3.0Licensehttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

Welcome back to the NightmareExpo!
This channel dives into the dark depths of YouTube and beyond with various analyses and discussions of eerie and disturbing topics.
Tonight, we're diving full-force into a captivating and masterful web-series that's telling its story in a very unique fashion. Enjoy.
Follow me on Twitter:
https://twitter.com/NightmareExpo
Join my Patreon!
https://www.patreon.com/NightmareExpo
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Abstractions:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCWzjTcV73LEvKA3Oy0r6D3Q
NightMind's analysis:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lm9mlc338SU
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Music:
Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution3.0Licensehttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

For the launch of a very special October issue of e-flux journal dedicated to Elizabeth Povinelli’s “Quasi-Events,” Brian Kuan Wood sits down with McKenzie Wark to discuss how the consolidation of finance and art asks for an update to the task of what Wark has termed “the hacker class.” If we take art as an expanded notion of design, how can we then intervene into the way contemporary capitalism steals our intellectual labor under the auspices of some mythical form/content divide? And how is that impossible when, after all, I am my own money?

For the launch of a very special October issue of e-flux journal dedicated to Elizabeth Povinelli’s “Quasi-Events,” Brian Kuan Wood sits down with McKenzie Wark to discuss how the consolidation of finance and art asks for an update to the task of what Wark has termed “the hacker class.” If we take art as an expanded notion of design, how can we then intervene into the way contemporary capitalism steals our intellectual labor under the auspices of some mythical form/content divide? And how is that impossible when, after all, I am my own money?

Sustaining productivity in a software project requires more than clean syntax and efficient process. It requires clear ideas.
Well-abstracted software is flexi...

Sustaining productivity in a software project requires more than clean syntax and efficient process. It requires clear ideas.
Well-abstracted software is flexible in ways its business domain can take advantage of. It enables a sustained, or even accelerated, development pace over the course of a project. Poorly abstracted software tends to calcify, with each new feature being more difficult to the add than the previous.
Unfortunately, there aren’t many tools to directly guide effective abstraction. Refactoring and code smells are too code-centric. Processes such as Domain-Driven Development focus too narrowly on business domain modeling, which is important, but too focused.
In this talk, Drew will attempt to describe how many of the best developers already abstract in software projects. The goal is to provide a vocabulary and framework to facilitate effective discussions about abstraction decisions with colleagues and team members.
About Drew
As a project lead and senior developer at AtomicObject, I help customers with all phases of a project from user research, through design and architecture, to implementation and release. My approach to projects is to aim for an ideal balance between user needs, business goals, financial demands, and technical constraints.
I started at Atomic in 2006, after earning degrees in math and computer science, from Grand Valley. I graduated cum laude and was recognized as one of two outstanding computer science students in my graduating class. Since that time, I’ve been a part of over a dozen projects including web, mobile, desktop, and cloud.
Core to my development philosophy is the belief that a software codebase provides the most value when it is expressed in terms of a precise understanding of the business domain. This enables a product to change in response to evolving realities and scale in functionality beyond what was originally envisioned. In recent years, pursuing this ideal has led me to continually hone my approach to the practice of software abstraction and fueled my interest in programming language paradigms that provide more natural ways to express intent.
Following these interests, I started DetroitLambdaLounge in 2012 to focus on big ideas in software development – languages, paradigms, and perspectives that can provide new insight into how to develop software. In addition to DLL, I speak regularly at conferences and user groups.

Sustaining productivity in a software project requires more than clean syntax and efficient process. It requires clear ideas.
Well-abstracted software is flexible in ways its business domain can take advantage of. It enables a sustained, or even accelerated, development pace over the course of a project. Poorly abstracted software tends to calcify, with each new feature being more difficult to the add than the previous.
Unfortunately, there aren’t many tools to directly guide effective abstraction. Refactoring and code smells are too code-centric. Processes such as Domain-Driven Development focus too narrowly on business domain modeling, which is important, but too focused.
In this talk, Drew will attempt to describe how many of the best developers already abstract in software projects. The goal is to provide a vocabulary and framework to facilitate effective discussions about abstraction decisions with colleagues and team members.
About Drew
As a project lead and senior developer at AtomicObject, I help customers with all phases of a project from user research, through design and architecture, to implementation and release. My approach to projects is to aim for an ideal balance between user needs, business goals, financial demands, and technical constraints.
I started at Atomic in 2006, after earning degrees in math and computer science, from Grand Valley. I graduated cum laude and was recognized as one of two outstanding computer science students in my graduating class. Since that time, I’ve been a part of over a dozen projects including web, mobile, desktop, and cloud.
Core to my development philosophy is the belief that a software codebase provides the most value when it is expressed in terms of a precise understanding of the business domain. This enables a product to change in response to evolving realities and scale in functionality beyond what was originally envisioned. In recent years, pursuing this ideal has led me to continually hone my approach to the practice of software abstraction and fueled my interest in programming language paradigms that provide more natural ways to express intent.
Following these interests, I started DetroitLambdaLounge in 2012 to focus on big ideas in software development – languages, paradigms, and perspectives that can provide new insight into how to develop software. In addition to DLL, I speak regularly at conferences and user groups.

Author: Barbara LiskovAbstract:
Barbara Liskov examines the evolution of abstractions, such as processes and software layers, to organize complex systems. Some abstractions are separate service processes invoked by RPC, others are overlaid on a users process by monitors. Many have found their way into system programming languages. Communication is a major issue.
ACM DL: http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=2830903.2830906
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2830903.2830906

Author: Barbara LiskovAbstract:
Barbara Liskov examines the evolution of abstractions, such as processes and software layers, to organize complex systems. Some abstractions are separate service processes invoked by RPC, others are overlaid on a users process by monitors. Many have found their way into system programming languages. Communication is a major issue.
ACM DL: http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=2830903.2830906
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2830903.2830906

The principles of abstraction are drilled into us repeatedly, and we work hard to abstract the layers of our applications. Abstraction between layers is excelle...

The principles of abstraction are drilled into us repeatedly, and we work hard to abstract the layers of our applications. Abstraction between layers is excellent, but what about abstraction within layers, especially the data layer? Many developers still build database-centric applications, and then struggle the day they need an additional or new data source. Learn the reasons why this is a poor design choice, and the best ways to avoid it.

The principles of abstraction are drilled into us repeatedly, and we work hard to abstract the layers of our applications. Abstraction between layers is excellent, but what about abstraction within layers, especially the data layer? Many developers still build database-centric applications, and then struggle the day they need an additional or new data source. Learn the reasons why this is a poor design choice, and the best ways to avoid it.

Tiark Rompf of EPFL and Purdue University speaks about his LightweightModularStagingFramework, in a talk entitled "Abstraction Without Regret for Efficient Data Processing", at the PDXScala Meetup, 21 October 2014.
Tiark graduated EPFL in the Scala team, where he developed the Lightweight Modular Staging framework (scala-lms.github.io), which compiles domain-specific programs to efficient and parallel code for GPUs, multi-threaded CPUs and clusters. Currently Tiark is a professor at Purdue University and he just got the best paper award in the most prestigious conference in databases, VLDB, for a paper applying the Lightweight Modular Staging technique for databases queries.

Tiark Rompf of EPFL and Purdue University speaks about his LightweightModularStagingFramework, in a talk entitled "Abstraction Without Regret for Efficient Data Processing", at the PDXScala Meetup, 21 October 2014.
Tiark graduated EPFL in the Scala team, where he developed the Lightweight Modular Staging framework (scala-lms.github.io), which compiles domain-specific programs to efficient and parallel code for GPUs, multi-threaded CPUs and clusters. Currently Tiark is a professor at Purdue University and he just got the best paper award in the most prestigious conference in databases, VLDB, for a paper applying the Lightweight Modular Staging technique for databases queries.

Reinventing Abstraction Curated by Raphael Rubinstein at CHEIM & READ

James Kalm, like so many other young artists, arrived in New York to pursue a career as a painter, whatever that meant. It was the late seventies, and the city...

James Kalm, like so many other young artists, arrived in New York to pursue a career as a painter, whatever that meant. It was the late seventies, and the city was in desperate straights, with entire swaths of its neighborhoods crumbling into ruins. Established art hegemonies of Minimalism and Conceptualism were also collapsing. The scene was ripe for new and unprecedented experimental approaches to artistic production, with even the loathed practice of painting given reconsideration. " Reinventing Abstraction: New York Painting in the 1980s" takes a look at some artists who pushed the boundaries of abstraction, and reasserted its validity as a realm of intellectual investigation. Raphael Rubenstein has collected together prime examples of the well, and lesser known painters of this period, giving viewers a chance to confront the actual paintings that have channeled the aesthetics we are immersed in today. This exhibition includes the works of: Louise Fishman, Bill Jensen, Jonathan Lasker, Pat Steir, Jack Whitten, Elizabeth Murray, Carroll Dunham, StanleyWhitney, Terry Winters, Joan Snyder, David Reed , Mary Heilmann , Thomas Nozkowski , Gary Stephan and Stephen Mueller

James Kalm, like so many other young artists, arrived in New York to pursue a career as a painter, whatever that meant. It was the late seventies, and the city was in desperate straights, with entire swaths of its neighborhoods crumbling into ruins. Established art hegemonies of Minimalism and Conceptualism were also collapsing. The scene was ripe for new and unprecedented experimental approaches to artistic production, with even the loathed practice of painting given reconsideration. " Reinventing Abstraction: New York Painting in the 1980s" takes a look at some artists who pushed the boundaries of abstraction, and reasserted its validity as a realm of intellectual investigation. Raphael Rubenstein has collected together prime examples of the well, and lesser known painters of this period, giving viewers a chance to confront the actual paintings that have channeled the aesthetics we are immersed in today. This exhibition includes the works of: Louise Fishman, Bill Jensen, Jonathan Lasker, Pat Steir, Jack Whitten, Elizabeth Murray, Carroll Dunham, StanleyWhitney, Terry Winters, Joan Snyder, David Reed , Mary Heilmann , Thomas Nozkowski , Gary Stephan and Stephen Mueller

Hilma af Klint (October 26, 1862– October 21, 1944) was a Swedish artist and mystic whose paintings were amongst the first abstract art..diagrams, were a visual representation of complex spiritual ideas.
Like Vassily Kandinsky, Piet Mondrian and Kazimir Malevich, who have previously been regarded as the main protagonists of abstract art, Hilma af Klint was influenced by contemporary spiritual movements, such as spiritism, theosophy and, later, anthroposophy. Hilma af Klint’s oeuvre builds on the awareness of a spiritual dimension of consciousness, an aspect that was being marginalised in an increasingly materialistic world. When she painted, she believed that a higher consciousness was speaking through her. In her astonishing works she combines geometric shapes and symbols with ornamentation. Her multifaceted imagery strives to give insights into the different dimensions of existence, where microcosm and macrocosm reflect one another.
Hilma af Klint left more than 1,000 paintings, watercolours and sketches. Although she exhibited her early, representational works, she refused to show her abstract paintings during her lifetime. In her will, she stipulated that these groundbreaking works must not be shown publicly until 20 years after her death. She was convinced that only then would the world be fully and completely ready to understand their significance.

Hilma af Klint (October 26, 1862– October 21, 1944) was a Swedish artist and mystic whose paintings were amongst the first abstract art..diagrams, were a visual representation of complex spiritual ideas.
Like Vassily Kandinsky, Piet Mondrian and Kazimir Malevich, who have previously been regarded as the main protagonists of abstract art, Hilma af Klint was influenced by contemporary spiritual movements, such as spiritism, theosophy and, later, anthroposophy. Hilma af Klint’s oeuvre builds on the awareness of a spiritual dimension of consciousness, an aspect that was being marginalised in an increasingly materialistic world. When she painted, she believed that a higher consciousness was speaking through her. In her astonishing works she combines geometric shapes and symbols with ornamentation. Her multifaceted imagery strives to give insights into the different dimensions of existence, where microcosm and macrocosm reflect one another.
Hilma af Klint left more than 1,000 paintings, watercolours and sketches. Although she exhibited her early, representational works, she refused to show her abstract paintings during her lifetime. In her will, she stipulated that these groundbreaking works must not be shown publicly until 20 years after her death. She was convinced that only then would the world be fully and completely ready to understand their significance.

Network Abstraction at Different Layers of the Stack

As the core network abstractions provided by Neutron is getting widespread usage, newer abstractions for network services (such as service insertion and service...

As the core network abstractions provided by Neutron is getting widespread usage, newer abstractions for network services (such as service insertion and service chaining) are being worked out by the Neutron community. However, it remains unclear if the provided level of abstraction is suitable at higher layers of the stack. In particular, applications that are used for deploying various workloads may find a different and higher level network abstraction more useful. In this talk we first present the Neutron abstraction for networking resources including the newly developed network services. We then show how different levels of network abstraction can be more useful at higher layers and propose alternative workload-centric abstractions for network resources. In particular, we discuss Heat and TOSCA as they relate to specifying the network requirements of various real-world workloads.

As the core network abstractions provided by Neutron is getting widespread usage, newer abstractions for network services (such as service insertion and service chaining) are being worked out by the Neutron community. However, it remains unclear if the provided level of abstraction is suitable at higher layers of the stack. In particular, applications that are used for deploying various workloads may find a different and higher level network abstraction more useful. In this talk we first present the Neutron abstraction for networking resources including the newly developed network services. We then show how different levels of network abstraction can be more useful at higher layers and propose alternative workload-centric abstractions for network resources. In particular, we discuss Heat and TOSCA as they relate to specifying the network requirements of various real-world workloads.

Abstraction - A Programming Concept

Today, we approach, and attempt to understand, one of the higher-level programming concepts - Abstraction.
= 0612 TV =
0612 TV, a sub-project of NERDfirst.net, is an educational YouTube channel. Started in 2008, we have now covered a wide range of topics, from areas such as Programming, Algorithms and Computing Theories, Computer Graphics, Photography, and Specialized Guides for using software such as FFMPEG, Deshaker, GIMP and more!
Enjoy your stay, and don't hesitate to drop me a comment or a personal message to my inbox =) If you like my work, don't forget to subscribe!
Like what you see? Buy me a coffee → http://www.nerdfirst.net/donate/
0612 TV Official Writeup: http://nerdfirst.net/0612tv
More about me: http://about.me/lcc0612
Official Twitter: http://twitter.com/0612tv
= NERDfirst =
NERDfirst is a project allowing me to go above and beyond YouTube videos into areas like app and game development. It will also contain the official 0612 TV blog and other resources.
Watch this space, and keep your eyes peeled on this channel for more updates! http://nerdfirst.net/
-----
Disclaimer: Please note that any information is provided on this channel in good faith, but I cannot guarantee 100% accuracy / correctness on all content. Contributors to this channel are not to be held responsible for any possible outcomes from your use of the information.

7:20

What is Abstract Art?

Here's a short crash course on abstract art, how it evolved and how to appreciate it.
(Not...

What is Abstract Art?

Here's a short crash course on abstract art, how it evolved and how to appreciate it.
(Note: Expressionism has not been included)
Drawn elements of the video were done using Skitch, where the JPG photos were then imported into iMovie.
This video is for educational purposes only.

9:18

The Case for Abstraction | The Art Assignment | PBS Digital Studios

For much of human history, people made art by trying to represent the world as it appeared...

The Case for Abstraction | The Art Assignment | PBS Digital Studios

For much of human history, people made art by trying to represent the world as it appeared around them. Until about 100 years ago, when a bunch of artists stopped trying to do that. It was shocking then and it still upsets and confounds today. How are we supposed to deal with art completely removed from recognizable objects? And why should we? This is the case for Abstraction.
Hear our case for Minimalism: https://youtu.be/XEi0Ib-nNGo
Subscribe for new episodes of The Art Assignment every Thursday!
--
Follow us elsewhere for the full Art Assignment experience:
Tumblr: http://theartassignment.com
Response Tumblr: http://all.theartassignment.com
Twitter: http://twitter.com/artassignment
Instagram: http://instagram.com/theartassignment/
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/theartassignment
and don't forget Reddit!: http://www.reddit.com/r/TheArtAssignment

1/6 The Rules Of Abstraction With Matthew Collings

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bg3oQ_OqQ_o&list=PLM4S2hGZDSE5SOht-nruKVOvuR5lrCw2T&index=1
First broadcast: Sep 2014.
Documentary in which painter and critic Matthew Collings charts the rise of abstract art over the last 100 years, whilst trying to answer a set of basic questions that many people have about this often-baffling art form. How do we respond to abstract art when we see it? Is it supposed to be hard or easy? When abstract artists chuck paint about with abandon, what does it mean? Does abstract art stand for something or is it supposed to be understood as just itself?
These might be thought of as unanswerable questions, but by looking at key historical figures and exploring the private world of abstract artists today, Collings shows that there are, in fact, answers.
Living artists in the programme create art in front of the camera using techniques that seem outrageously free, but through his friendly-yet-probing interview style Collings immediately establishes that the work always has a firm rationale. When Collings visits 92-year-old Bert Irvin in his studio in Stepney, east London he finds that the colourful works continue experiments in perceptual ideas about colour and space first established by abstract art pioneers such as Paul Klee and Wassily Kandinsky in the 1910s.
Other historic artists featured in the programme include the notorious Jackson Pollock, the maker of drip paintings, and Mark Rothko, whose abstractions often consist of nothing but large expanses of red. Collings explains the inner structure of such works. It turns out there are hidden rules to abstraction that viewers of this intriguing, groundbreaking programme may never have expected.

9:42

8.16 Abstraction in Java

This video has theory explanation for abstraction in java.
Abstraction is one of the conce...

Abstraction Layers Explained

One of my teach-by-drawing examples done on Samsung Note 3, which I'll soon do more of, and incorporate into my talking-head coding videos in the future. Let me know in comments if you'd like to see more.

7:40

Into Abstraction | Form and Impermanence

The complexity of the Impermanence that fosters ambiguity in our lives. Into Abstraction |...

Trabeation | Why Buildings Look Like They Do, pt.8 - Abstraction

Inventive structural systems are the lynchpin of many great buildings. But there would be no need for advanced systems without imagination. Architects are creative and that’s why buildings don’t all look the same. The twentieth century has been especially innovative and it all began, in many ways, with the Modern Movement. The term refers to a new direction in arts and architecture in the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries.
An abstraction is the essence of something—a simplified representation. To abstract is to subjectively transform by stripping away the superfluous. Abstract painters like Picasso, Matisse, Klee, Kandinsky, and Boccioni took real subjects and ideas and simplified them to their basic elements. With modernism painters simplified their subject matter, and architects made building elements more primitive—that is, they left the bare-bones essentials. Modernists stripped ornament from their work and therefore the meaning associated with it.
By the beginning of the 20th century abstraction was to emerge with power in Germany with examples like Peter Behren’s AEG Turbine factory, Walter Gropius and Adolf Meyers Shoe factory and the Glass Pavilion by Bruno Taut. And in FranceSwiss French architect Le Corbusier’s was perfecting the Modern style. His Villa Savoye, completed in 1931, is a notable example of abstraction. His columns became simple, undecorated, functional elements that held up the building—they were called pilotis. Stairs were replaced with ramps, and individual windows became strips of glass called ribbon windows. Adolf Loos distilled his buildings down to un ornamented geometric shapes. Walter Gropius founded the Bauhaus, a school for modernism in Germany. His work, including the building in Dessau finished in 1926, was stripped down and bare—stucco, concrete, and massive areas of glass.

Teaching the Abstraction Counting Principle

Please subscribe and share! New videos added weekly.
For more information on the Counting Principles, check out our series of books for EarlyLearners. origoeducation.com/mym
Do you have any lightbulb moments to share with us? Comment below.
This ORIGO ONE series of videos show you how to create lightbulb moments for your students. These videos take a mathematics concept and break it into pieces that are easy to understand and only take a minute to watch.
www.origoeducation.com
Check out our other social media:
www.facebook.com/origoeducation
www.twitter.com/origomath
www.pinterest.com/origoeducation

Kevin Abstract has also previewed opening track 'Ready For War'Brockhampton's AmeerVann and Kevin Abstract...The band’s leader Kevin Abstract recently spoke to fans on Instagram Live, saying that while the group have been “working really hard on the album”, the record’s release is likely to be pushed back ... Abstract said ... Admitting that it has been “hard for me to sleep”, Abstract added....

There's so much data presented here, with thousands of abstracts delivered to an audience of some 30,000 healthcare professionals, that it's tough to keep up ... This series includes 4 abstracts per day, but note that subscribers to the Total Pharma Tracker get a bonus abstract discussion ... Overall, 48.3% of the patients achieved a pathologic complete remission, but the abstract did not present an unblinded look at the data....

TORRINGTON — Five PointsGallery, located at 33 Main St. in downtown Torrington, will open two concurrent shows, “Rikyu- CHA” and “No Man’s Land. Women and Abstraction,” that will run from May 31 through July 7. “Rikyu - CHA,” a solo exhibition of Raimi Slater’s small, exquisite paintings, will be in the TDP gallery ... Women and Abstraction,” is a group show ... ....

(THE CONVERSATION) Have you ever clicked on a link like “What does your favorite animal say about you?” wondering what your love of hedgehogs reveals about your psyche? Or filled out a personality assessment to gain new understanding into whether you’re an introverted or extroverted “type”? People love turning to these kinds of personality quizzes and tests on the hunt for deep insights into themselves....

Money on the Left: Aesthetics & Abstraction

*Money on the Left: Word, Image, Praxis*
Aesthetics & Abstraction
Rachel Cox, “Not So-OK KO: Neoliberal Anxieties in Current Televised Animation”
Modern monetary theory, in addition to providing a different approach to understanding economics, explicitly critiques the more traditional, neoliberal worldview. Both views come with different aesthetic implications, as explored in modern monetary aesthetic theory. In general, because neoliberalism has an anxious relationship of denial towards abstraction, aesthetic abstraction is largely suppressed. However, this relationship is further complicated in the medium of children’s animation, wherein abstraction is built into the constructed, animated worlds. In this talk, I will look at one of the ways that abstraction is simultaneously embraced (in the bodies of the characters) and aggressively suppressed (in the worlds that the cartoons take place) in contemporary televised children’s cartoons.
Michael McDowell, “The Neoliberal, Austerity Money-Physics in the Dystopian SurvivalGame, The Flame in the Flood”
The Flame in the Flood (2017) was released by independent game developer The Molasses Flood. The game sets the player in control of a protagonist on the river of a post- apocalyptic landscape. The player navigates through this landscape but can never actually beat the game: no matter how good the player is, the protagonist always ends up dead. The game, in its visual and musical constructions of place and setting, makes explicit the inherent tensions in Modernity. The game is a digitally-distributed entertainment media that invokes pre-modern folk sensibilities in music and gameplay, the artistic style of the game’s lead artist Scott Sinclair is at once realistic and detailed while also grotesque and gothic, and the game was funded and distributed through crowd sourcing and independent game and music networks while relying on traditionally capitalist ways of selling the game to players. What’s most notable for this conference is the game’s embrace of neoliberal money- physics to create such a dystopian playground: every action in the game, from levels of thirst to the amount of sickness a player is enduring, is quantified and itemized in a way that adheres to a liberal money economic system. The player’s character, we’re told, must die because the developers simply don’t have the mechanics to provide another outcome. If a player, constrained by the rules of the game constructed rather arbitrarily by the designers, can play in such a dystopian sandbox with austerity, constrained game mechanics, what does that say about the possibilities of play in a system that understands boundless, public ideas of money? If money plays by the will of the market due to natural law, why does a game that creates the ideal liberal austerity landscape look like such an awful place to inhabit?
Maxximilian Seijo, “Inglorious Basterds: NaziDesire Fully Employed”
Quentin Tarantino’s 2009 film Inglorious Basterds sketches an alternate history for the end of WWII and the defeat of the Nazis. In retelling this history, the film avows specific aesthetic and narrative structures that allude to a desire for the figure of the Nazi. Where other forms of media typically deny this persistent desire, Inglorious Basterds embraces it in a Baroque sensationalism. In this paper, I will argue that this desire emanates from a particular economic moment in American life in which money’s boundlessness was utilized: the WWII mobilization. The mobilization enabled the lowest unemployment rate in the history of the United States, and marked the triumph of the “greatest generation” of Americans serving in the factories or on the front lines. This triumph is predicated on the Nazi enemy. WithoutNazism, the mass-unemployment of the depression would have lingered into the future. Hinting at this connection, the film makes specific overtures to the nature of employment “obligations” in relationship to fighting Nazism. Looking closely at the film, I reveal how it expresses an unconscious dependence upon the Nazi villain. What is more, I shall contend that the film makes evident this desire for the Nazi through its braiding of cinema writ large with the existence of Nazism. Without the Nazi villain, we lose the cinema. In our desire for employment, we create Nazis on screen that stimulate our desire for the Nazi enemy. Paradoxically, the Nazi form is a form we create to grasp for employment in a quest for social care. As an evocative depiction of this multi-generational quest, Inglorious Basterds discloses and implicates spectators in this repressed desire and permits us to reorganize our political and aesthetic economies around social provisioning rather than war.
@moneyontheleft
https://www.facebook.com/moneyontheleft/
http://modern-money-humanities.webflow.io/

In this lecture, “Demystifying Abstraction,” artist Jessica Singerman shares a brief history of abstraction, and talks about her painting process, inspiration, life as an artist, and why making art matters. The talk is followed by a Q&A session where she goes into more detail about her education, philosophy, and where art comes from. The lecture, given on Wednesday April 25, is part of the Charlotte Millennial ArtProgram series at ElderGallery in Charlotte, NC.
www.jessicasingerman.com

4:31

The Importance of Abstraction in Management

This is video # 2 in EISM course on the Definitive Theory of Management.
"When I tell pe...

The Importance of Abstraction in Management

This is video # 2 in EISM course on the DefinitiveTheory of Management.
"When I tell people that there is a definitive way to understand management, I think most people - especially those with management experience - are a little skeptical and I certainly understand why. If you bear with me, however, you’ll see that this is exactly what we have. We have a definitive theory of management, which we’re defining as the science of fuller being. I say science because that’s exactly what it is. And I say fuller being because that’s exactly what everybody’s after – we want to avoid extinction and live forever as a species. So let’s take this one step at a time.
In the first video, we started at a higher level of abstraction than most people are used to when it comes to thinking about management. In this video I want to explain why this is so important and in future videos I plan to show how thinking on the wrong level of abstraction leads to ideas that are simply wrong, or into projects that are doomed to fail.
So, first of all what is abstraction? Abstraction is simply the process of going from thinking about specific things to thinking about more general concepts, usually with some sort of problem-solving goal in mind. When we go from thinking about how one specific company functions to thinking about how all companies function, then to thinking about how the whole world functions, and from there we ask ourselves how the universe functions, and maybe what happened at the Big Bang, we've engaged in thinking at successively higher levels of abstraction. This process of abstracting from a specific notion to more general concepts is thought to be connected to the evolution of human language and intelligence. In fact, most intelligence tests are basically proxies that measure a person's ability to understand and work with abstract concepts.
The key to understanding why abstraction is so important is because the level of abstraction on which we begin sets the limit on our ability to solve problems. To illustrate what I mean, imagine being the captain of a ship that's approaching an iceberg. Imagine that you're in one of the control rooms but you're not aware of the iceberg and for whatever reason your radars are not working. Because of this you're concerned with some lesser issue in the control room. In this scenario, your inability to understand the situation at a higher level is putting you and your ship at risk. If you lifted your thinking to see the bigger picture, you would understand that the real problem is not the one you're trying to solve. The real problem is the approaching iceberg.
In a similar way, the current crisis in management, which is manifest in our inability to deal with things like the economy and climate change and war, springs from our inability to understand the cause and effect of it all at the highest level of abstraction. We simply don’t understand root causes.
In the next few videos, I'm going to argue qualitatively and visually – but I will also give you access to the physics and the math - that this inability to rise to the highest levels of abstraction is the main reason there’s so much confusion not only in our companies but in our cities and in our thinking in general. I hope you'll stay tuned because what's coming is really important for everything you care about."

16:30

Abstraction Artist: Anne Marchand Documentary

Abstract painting can thrust us into the unknown, immersing us in the midst of liminal vis...

Abstraction Artist: Anne Marchand Documentary

Abstract painting can thrust us into the unknown, immersing us in the midst of liminal visual and emotional experiences, without fixed name or context. This kind of art is full of risk and unexpected reward, asking the viewer to take a fraught journey right along with the artist.
Anne Marchand’s paintings transport us into virtual worlds that form themselves before our eyes.She presents visions of a reality that is alive with shifting space, moving color, and animated lines. These phenomena are embodied in the material reality of paint, along with a range of materials embedded in the work’s surface.
In Marchand’s work over the past ten years, the emotional range, poetic import, and inner structures have evolved significantly. What remains consistent is this artist’s pursuit of a quality of mystery and sensuousness in ever-changing scenarios of transformation.

1:16

Birth of a Painting Series XII: World in Abstraction

This series, World of Abstraction, my paintings are based upon philosophical ideas and add...

Birth of a Painting Series XII: World in Abstraction

This series, World of Abstraction, my paintings are based upon philosophical ideas and addressing the unknown. Paintings by Denise Hartley.
Copyright 2018.
http://www.dahartley.com
“Passage Way”, mixed media on wood, gold leaf, 4’ x 6’, 2002. Private collection.
“Passage Way”, the opening to another dimension.
“Mitochondria I, Mitochondria II, mixed media on wood, gold leaf, 4’ x 6’, 2002. Private collections.
Each of our cells can contain thousands of mitochondria. They are used by our bodies to convert molecules into energy.
“JadeDisc”, acrylic paint on canvas, 4’ x 6’, 2002.
“Jade Disc”, called a bi disc, is a flat jade disc, with a circular hole in the center. They were used in Neolithic times, burial objects, undecorated, about 3000 B.C.E. The jade objects represent Heaven and were laid on the diseased.
“Tao”, mixed media, acrylic on canvas, 4’ x 6’, 2002.
This painting represents the beginning of the universe. The red rays piercing the disc, are the sparks that create the Ten ThousandThings in our existence.
"Silent Passage", oil on gessoed wood, 4' x 6', 2003.
The reason water can keep changing its form is because it is essentially formless. Its form is determined by what is around it. Put it in a cup, and it will be cup-shaped. Put it in a ravine, and it will be river-shaped. It needs no form of its own, because it harmonizes with everything around it, taking other beings as its outline, instead of imposing itself upon others. Lao Tzu, The Tao Te Ching.
“Zen Drawing”, mixed media on wood, 3’ x 4’, 2002. Private Collection.
Enlightenment, the first principle is possible acknowledging the everything and everyone is Buddha-nature. Enlightenment is possible to everyone. Enlightenment in Buddhism, or for the Taoist sage. is not expressible in words, or logical thought. Intuitive understanding is necessary, acknowledging the eternity is here and now.
Thank you for watching!

5:35

Enter into Abstraction with Acrylic Ink Droplets

I'm new at this, so feel free to laugh! I'm a photographer, working my way into the digit...

Enter into Abstraction with Acrylic Ink Droplets

I'm new at this, so feel free to laugh! I'm a photographer, working my way into the digital age, and thought I'd share some tips and tricks I've learned about specialized/trick/abstract photography along the way (and I'm still learning).
This episode is about using acrylic in in a fishtank of water to get visually interesting abstracts. You can see full albums of this work at my facebook page:
https://www.facebook.com/richparkerimage
I'm working on a promo website, et cetera, but it's not ready for prime time yet.
So watch, comment, enjoy, and hopefully you'll find something useful from the video.

We present an interactive method that allows users to easily abstract complex 3D models with only a few strokes. The key idea is to employ well-known Gestalt principles to help generalizing user inputs into a full model abstraction while accounting for form, perceptual patterns, and semantics of the model. Using these principles, we alleviate the user’s need to explicitly define shape abstractions. We utilize structural characteristics such as repetitions, regularity and similarity to transform user strokes into full 3D abstractions. As the user sketches over shape elements, we identify Gestalt groups and later abstract them to maintain their structural meaning. Unlike previous approaches, we operate directly on the geometric elements, in a sense applying Gestalt principles in 3D. We demonstrate the effectiveness of our approach with a series of experiments, including a variety of complex models and two extensive user studies to evaluate our framework.
Julian Kratt, TillNiese, Ruizhen Hu, Hui Huang, Ssören Pirk, Andrei Sharf, Daniel Cohen-Or, OliverDeussen
Sketching in Gestalt Space: InteractiveShape Abstraction through Perceptual Reasoning
Computer GraphicsForum (to appear).(to appear) (2018), P. (to appear)

9:22

Agent of Change: Thought Into Form "Living in Abstraction"

Living an abstract life is a lifestyle, something that is embraced every day and in the ev...

Agent of Change: Thought Into Form "Living in Abstraction"

Living an abstract life is a lifestyle, something that is embraced every day and in the every day, which allows me to live in a place where time, space, metaphor, personal symbols and icons, and messages from a higher place dictate and expand my ideas and decisions. There are some aspects to embracing and maintaining this state of being, of living. Today, I’m going to share the aspects which mean the most to me.
For more info, visit www.thoughtintoform.org

https://www.fiverr.com/dannying
intro videos maker - In this video I'm going to show you how to make an intro video for your website using your TEXTIntroMakerFreeOnline | How to make a free intro for your youtube videos Category how to make an intro without downloads, In Explore, you can discover and watch new music, news, sports, and trailers from ShowTodayTV best creators, brands, and Channels
A far more stylish and professional way of going about it is to make an intro that gently leads into the main content of the video
How to make an intro 2018 Mp3 song file download now in 320 kbps Video how to make an intro beginner, All video with tags how to make an intro beginner | Website offers the hottest video clips, troll clips of girls, kids, animals
top 5 free windows live movie maker intro templates #2.
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-
Please watch: "Your logo in a classic car add your logo to a classic car to promoted your brand. "
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=do0oUopn6pk
-~-~~-~~~-~~-~-

Abstraction UHC Season 1 Episode 4 ~ Potsie, Dianab and I are in Frenzy apparently

Hello and welcome to Abstraction Season 1!
Abstraction is an RR organized by Mrsonicfan and MaverickMC where each season we try pairing cool gamemode combinations together while maintaining a rather different roster.
For our first season, we will be doing random teams of four, with two gamemodes. The first being compensation, where When a player on a team dies, the player's max health is divided up and added to the max health of the player's teammates, along with gapples healing 20% of your maximum amount of health. The second gamemode being Quad Soul-Brothers, where at the beginning of Episode 1, each player on a team is scattered into a separate world, only to be rescattered together in Episode 5.
Teams:
Blue:
----------
5kylord: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCz0WSqA-RjzXxILgd6bpKNA
AJSteel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCTszFWyGHxoZYI5yFDIih7g
Austronomical: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClPQXE9ZHWSSWQswECK-1dw
MaverickMC: https://www.youtube.com/user/27FrenchToast27
Green:
----------
Bradzi: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqug0Bwki46xfmbHy8JnLGA
Eyehasnoidea: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCDJdzMb30DDlQP8f3k6QgCA
Glen: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCZ7D2povbdKMkqYMdNKQcxA
Topspinpiggles: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCq4wmpWYxxj0_9Gg2Ywz76g
Purple:
----------
Bacan: https://www.youtube.com/user/bacanandeggs
LegoBeast: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLZtmd4Jo607GC5X-qm18QA
Mrsonicfan: https://www.youtube.com/user/Mrsonicfanify
OG_Ash: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCMofxr2RO4NwJaTB2voTGRg
Orange:
----------
CH0CK: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCUvyjIoaDLIGpI9Wevcq-gg
Pelargo: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCOtDZUQb2GcYM6AiDmt1GFA
Potsie: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC641HaOiHNo_lr09MeHYwaQ
SD_UHC: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClFele72MNVn1_0Z6u_l2KQ
Pink:
----------
Aunk: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCr44j5vxSZwAQGeE9L-HITA
Lucity: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCl2uBeSOjqzBzS9H5J_jVnA
Meowzerzz: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCVlfIV2O0PRsntvrQYCH2KQ
MercuryParadox: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCbMQuK0B3BRZmXcWb1NzmCQ
Yellow:
----------
PenguinBagels: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC5WFN-Jj901IgSeNfMNvtPg
Sigilyph: https://www.youtube.com/user/eternalduskmcpvp
Sluggyg: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCH8vIvAvlOvYMKxk19fzyyA
WintherWaffle: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCXlSL1XDyi8BeSW96eEnQWA
Red:
----------
Apex_Twinkie: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC1cY2YELO_O8Gnae1eHrHOA
Blazerr: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqMLJVRp14kr5DGuAw7TH3Q
MajorWoof: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCE2isSMpPTI4CJ-9NZVrCQw
TheBananaMonster: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC1ltZRtlESbvYJOuv-Ndgpw
- - -
Credits:
Intro creation by Mrsonicfan
Render creation by Pelargo
Hosted by CountryCutie
Organization by Mrsonicfan & MaverickMC
Music: La Lune - Madeon
- - -
I hope you all enjoy the first season of Abstraction UHC :)

9:14

Abstraction UHC: S1E4 - Austro Dies In This Episode

Hello and welcome to Abstraction Season 1!
Abstraction is an RR organized by Mrsonicfan an...

Abstraction UHC: S1E4 - Austro Dies In This Episode

Hello and welcome to Abstraction Season 1!
Abstraction is an RR organized by Mrsonicfan and MaverickMC where each season we try pairing cool gamemode combinations together while maintaining a rather different roster.
For our first season, we will be doing random teams of four, with two gamemodes. The first being compensation, where When a player on a team dies, the player's max health is divided up and added to the max health of the player's teammates, along with gapples healing 20% of your maximum amount of health. The second gamemode being Quad Soul-Brothers, where at the beginning of Episode 1, each player on a team is scattered into a separate world, only to be rescattered together in Episode 5.
Teams:
Blue:
----------
5kylord: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCz0WSqA-RjzXxILgd6bpKNA
AJSteel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCTszFWyGHxoZYI5yFDIih7g
Austronomical: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClPQXE9ZHWSSWQswECK-1dw
MaverickMC: https://www.youtube.com/user/27FrenchToast27
Green:
----------
Bradzi: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqug0Bwki46xfmbHy8JnLGA
Eyehasnoidea: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCDJdzMb30DDlQP8f3k6QgCA
Glen: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCZ7D2povbdKMkqYMdNKQcxA
Topspinpiggles: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCq4wmpWYxxj0_9Gg2Ywz76g
Purple:
----------
Bacan: https://www.youtube.com/user/bacanandeggs
LegoBeast: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLZtmd4Jo607GC5X-qm18QA
Mrsonicfan: https://www.youtube.com/user/Mrsonicfanify
OG_Ash: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCMofxr2RO4NwJaTB2voTGRg
Orange:
----------
CH0CK: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCUvyjIoaDLIGpI9Wevcq-gg
Pelargo: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCOtDZUQb2GcYM6AiDmt1GFA
Potsie: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC641HaOiHNo_lr09MeHYwaQ
SD_UHC: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClFele72MNVn1_0Z6u_l2KQ
Pink:
----------
Aunk: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCr44j5vxSZwAQGeE9L-HITA
Lucity: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCl2uBeSOjqzBzS9H5J_jVnA
Meowzerzz: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCVlfIV2O0PRsntvrQYCH2KQ
MercuryParadox: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCbMQuK0B3BRZmXcWb1NzmCQ
Yellow:
----------
PenguinBagels: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC5WFN-Jj901IgSeNfMNvtPg
Sigilyph: https://www.youtube.com/user/eternalduskmcpvp
Sluggyg: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCH8vIvAvlOvYMKxk19fzyyA
WintherWaffle: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCXlSL1XDyi8BeSW96eEnQWA
Red:
----------
Apex_Twinkie: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC1cY2YELO_O8Gnae1eHrHOA
Blazerr: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqMLJVRp14kr5DGuAw7TH3Q
MajorWoof: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCE2isSMpPTI4CJ-9NZVrCQw
TheBananaMonster: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC1ltZRtlESbvYJOuv-Ndgpw
- - -
Credits:
Intro creation by Mrsonicfan
Render creation by Pelargo
Hosted by CountryCutie
Organization by Mrsonicfan & MaverickMC
Music: La Lune - Madeon
- - -
I hope you all enjoy the first season of Abstraction UHC

20:55

Abstraction UHC : Ep2 - Map to Diamonds

Hello and welcome to Abstraction Season 1!
Abstraction is an RR organized by Mrsonicfan an...

Abstraction UHC : Ep2 - Map to Diamonds

Hello and welcome to Abstraction Season 1!
Abstraction is an RR organized by Mrsonicfan and MaverickMC where each season we try pairing cool gamemode combinations together while maintaining a rather different roster.
For our first season, we will be doing random teams of four, with two gamemodes. The first being compensation, where When a player on a team dies, the player's max health is divided up and added to the max health of the player's teammates, along with gapples healing 20% of your maximum amount of health. The second gamemode being Quad Soul-Brothers, where at the beginning of Episode 1, each player on a team is scattered into a separate world, only to be rescattered together in Episode 5.
Teams:
Blue:
----------
5kylord: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCz0WSqA-RjzXxILgd6bpKNA
AJSteel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCTszFWyGHxoZYI5yFDIih7g
Austronomical: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClPQXE9ZHWSSWQswECK-1dw
MaverickMC: https://www.youtube.com/user/27FrenchToast27
Green:
----------
Bradzi: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqug0Bwki46xfmbHy8JnLGA
Eyehasnoidea: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCDJdzMb30DDlQP8f3k6QgCA
Glen: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCZ7D2povbdKMkqYMdNKQcxA
Topspinpiggles: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCq4wmpWYxxj0_9Gg2Ywz76g
Purple:
----------
Bacan: https://www.youtube.com/user/bacanandeggs
LegoBeast: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLZtmd4Jo607GC5X-qm18QA
Mrsonicfan: https://www.youtube.com/user/Mrsonicfanify
OG_Ash: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCMofxr2RO4NwJaTB2voTGRg
Orange:
----------
CH0CK: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCUvyjIoaDLIGpI9Wevcq-gg
Pelargo: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCOtDZUQb2GcYM6AiDmt1GFA
Potsie: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC641HaOiHNo_lr09MeHYwaQ
SD_UHC: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UClFele72MNVn1_0Z6u_l2KQ
Pink:
----------
Aunk: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCr44j5vxSZwAQGeE9L-HITA
Lucity: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCl2uBeSOjqzBzS9H5J_jVnA
Meowzerzz: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCVlfIV2O0PRsntvrQYCH2KQ
MercuryParadox: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCbMQuK0B3BRZmXcWb1NzmCQ
Yellow:
----------
PenguinBagels: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC5WFN-Jj901IgSeNfMNvtPg
Sigilyph: https://www.youtube.com/user/eternalduskmcpvp
Sluggyg: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCH8vIvAvlOvYMKxk19fzyyA
WintherWaffle: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCXlSL1XDyi8BeSW96eEnQWA
Red:
----------
Apex_Twinkie: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC1cY2YELO_O8Gnae1eHrHOA
Blazerr: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqMLJVRp14kr5DGuAw7TH3Q
MajorWoof: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCE2isSMpPTI4CJ-9NZVrCQw
TheBananaMonster: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC1ltZRtlESbvYJOuv-Ndgpw
- - -
Credits:
Intro creation by Mrsonicfan
Render creation by Pelargo
Hosted by CountryCutie
Organization by Mrsonicfan & MaverickMC
Music: La Lune - Madeon
- - -
I hope you all enjoy the first season of Abstraction UHC :)

Abstractions: Explained

Welcome back to the NightmareExpo!
This channel dives into the dark depths of YouTube and beyond with various analyses and discussions of eerie and disturbing topics.
Tonight, we're diving full-force into a captivating and masterful web-series that's telling its story in a very unique fashion. Enjoy.
Follow me on Twitter:
https://twitter.com/NightmareExpo
Join my Patreon!
https://www.patreon.com/NightmareExpo
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Abstractions:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCWzjTcV73LEvKA3Oy0r6D3Q
NightMind's analysis:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lm9mlc338SU
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Music:
Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution3.0Licensehttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

How to Hack an Abstraction: Google Warhol | 09.27.2014

For the launch of a very special October issue of e-flux journal dedicated to Elizabeth Povinelli’s “Quasi-Events,” Brian Kuan Wood sits down with McKenzie Wark to discuss how the consolidation of finance and art asks for an update to the task of what Wark has termed “the hacker class.” If we take art as an expanded notion of design, how can we then intervene into the way contemporary capitalism steals our intellectual labor under the auspices of some mythical form/content divide? And how is that impossible when, after all, I am my own money?

33:07

How to paint like Pablo Picasso (Cubism) | IN THE STUDIO

Learn how to paint in the Cubist style of artists Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque in this...

Sustaining productivity in a software project requires more than clean syntax and efficient process. It requires clear ideas.
Well-abstracted software is flexible in ways its business domain can take advantage of. It enables a sustained, or even accelerated, development pace over the course of a project. Poorly abstracted software tends to calcify, with each new feature being more difficult to the add than the previous.
Unfortunately, there aren’t many tools to directly guide effective abstraction. Refactoring and code smells are too code-centric. Processes such as Domain-Driven Development focus too narrowly on business domain modeling, which is important, but too focused.
In this talk, Drew will attempt to describe how many of the best developers already abstract in software projects. The goal is to provide a vocabulary and framework to facilitate effective discussions about abstraction decisions with colleagues and team members.
About Drew
As a project lead and senior developer at AtomicObject, I help customers with all phases of a project from user research, through design and architecture, to implementation and release. My approach to projects is to aim for an ideal balance between user needs, business goals, financial demands, and technical constraints.
I started at Atomic in 2006, after earning degrees in math and computer science, from Grand Valley. I graduated cum laude and was recognized as one of two outstanding computer science students in my graduating class. Since that time, I’ve been a part of over a dozen projects including web, mobile, desktop, and cloud.
Core to my development philosophy is the belief that a software codebase provides the most value when it is expressed in terms of a precise understanding of the business domain. This enables a product to change in response to evolving realities and scale in functionality beyond what was originally envisioned. In recent years, pursuing this ideal has led me to continually hone my approach to the practice of software abstraction and fueled my interest in programming language paradigms that provide more natural ways to express intent.
Following these interests, I started DetroitLambdaLounge in 2012 to focus on big ideas in software development – languages, paradigms, and perspectives that can provide new insight into how to develop software. In addition to DLL, I speak regularly at conferences and user groups.

Perspectives on system languages and abstraction

Author: Barbara LiskovAbstract:
Barbara Liskov examines the evolution of abstractions, such as processes and software layers, to organize complex systems. Some abstractions are separate service processes invoked by RPC, others are overlaid on a users process by monitors. Many have found their way into system programming languages. Communication is a major issue.
ACM DL: http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=2830903.2830906
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2830903.2830906